Method and system for controlling a complementary user interface on a display surface

ABSTRACT

An alternate display content controller provides a technique for controlling a video display separately from and in addition to the content displayed on the operating system display surface. Where the display is a computer monitor, the alternate display content controller interacts with the computer utility operating system and hardware drivers to control allocation of display space and create and control one or more parallel graphical user interfaces in addition to the operating system desktop. An alternate display content controller may be incorporated in either hardware or software. As software, an alternate display content controller may be an application running on the computer operating system, or may include an operating system kernel of varying complexity ranging from dependent on the utility operating system for hardware system services to a parallel system independent of the utility operating system and capable of supporting dedicated applications. The alternate display content controller may also include content and operating software delivered over the Internet or any other LAN. The alternate display content controller may also be included in a television decoder/settop box to permit two or more parallel graphical user interfaces to be displayed simultaneously.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent applicationSer. No. 09/666,032, filed on Sep. 20, 2000, and claims the benefit ofU.S. Provisional Application Nos. 60/183,453, filed on Feb. 18, 2000 and60/248,438, filed on Nov. 13, 2000

TECHNICAL FIELD

The present invention relates to a method and system for controlling thedisplay of information on a display surface and, in particular, tocomputer software that displays one or more user interfaces that cancoexist with a native user interface provided by the computer system.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a first embodiment of the presentinvention.

FIG. 2 is a block diagram of a second embodiment of the presentinvention.

FIG. 3 is a diagram of a standard display with an overscan userinterface on all four borders of the display.

FIG. 4 is a block diagram of the basic components of a computer systemvideo display environment that interacts with the methods and systems ofthe present invention.

FIG. 5 is a diagram of a cursor or pointer within the overscan userinterface and the hotspot above it within the standard display.

FIG. 6 is a diagram of the usable border within the vertical overscanand the horizontal overscan surrounding the standard display.

FIG. 7 is an overview flow diagram showing the operation of a preferredembodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 8 is a flow diagram of the sub-steps in Identify Display step 102of FIG. 7.

FIG. 9 is a flow diagram of the sub-steps of changing the displayresolution step 114 of FIG. 7.

FIG. 10 is a flow diagram of the sub-steps in the Paint the Display step120 of FIG. 7.

FIG. 11 is a flow diagram of the sub-steps of Enable Linear Addressingstep 112 of FIG. 7.

FIG. 12 is a flow diagram of the sub-steps of the Process Message Loopof FIG. 7.

FIG. 13 is a flow diagram of the sub-steps of the Check Mouse andKeyboard Events step 184 in FIG. 12.

FIG. 14 is a flow diagram of the sub-steps of the Change EmulationResolution step 115 in FIG. 7.

FIG. 15 is a diagram of a standard display of the prior art.

FIG. 16 is a diagram of a standard display with an overscan userinterface in the bottom overscan area.

FIG. 17 is a diagram of a standard display including a desktop, anoverscan user interface in the bottom overscan area and a contextsensitive browser on the side.

FIG. 18 is a diagram of a standard display with an overscan userinterface in the bottom and on the right overscan area.

FIG. 19 is a line drawing of a parallel GUI according to an exampleembodiment.

FIG. 20 is a simplified example of a menu tree.

FIG. 21 is a line drawing of a parallel GUI with an accessory containeror cartridge.

FIGS. 22-30 are example screen display illustrations of severalcomplementary user interfaces coexisting with a native GUI.

FIG. 31 is an example block diagram of an implementation of the xSides™architecture.

FIG. 32 is an example block diagram of an application using pixel masktechnology in conjunction with an extended display area-enabled displaydriver.

FIG. 33 is an example screen display of application windows that aredisplayed using a universal trapping approach for modifying the displayarea and rendering outside of the native desktop.

FIG. 34 is an example block diagram of an example embodiment of thetrapping technique for modifying the display area.

FIG. 35 is an example block diagram of the trapping architecturesupporting multiple APIs for different windowing environments.

FIG. 36 is an example block diagram of the trapping architecturecommunication using kernel mode hooks.

FIG. 37 is an example block diagram of applications using techniquesthat intercept native graphics interface library calls.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Embodiments of the present invention provide computer-based methods andsystems for displaying information on a display surface. When a native(resident) operating system is present, these embodiments displayinformation in a manner that is complementary to the native operatingsystem. The information displayed may be coexistent with a userinterface provided by the native operating system. In addition,embodiments may be embedded into a native operating system and provide aprimary interface to a display surface.

Embodiments also provide a technique for controlling allocation andcontent of display space among one or more user interfaces, operatingsystems or applications permitting an application or parallel graphicaluser interface (GUI) to operate outside the desktop, the area designatedfor display of the native operating system interface and it's associatedapplications. In an example embodiment, a computer operating under thecontrol of any utility operating system such as Microsoft Windows™,Linux, Apple's Macintosh O/S or Unix may have the allocation of visibledisplay controlled by techniques of the present invention. The operatingsystem user interface (the native GUI) may be scaled and/or moved to aspecific area of the display permitting a parallel (or complementary)GUI to operate in the open area. An example embodiment of the presentinvention may be as an application that operates under the primary orutility operating system or it may be distributed as functionality thatis combined with an operating system kernel (e.g., distributed as amicrokernel) to control the display and content in the parallel display.

Also, in some embodiments, a technique is provided for adding and usinga parallel graphical user interface adjacent to the primary graphicaldisplay user interface, for example in the border beyond the standardscreen display area. Conventional video systems, such as VGA, SVGA, XGA,SXGA and UXGA video systems, include a defined border surrounding thedisplay area. The original purpose of this border was to allow adequatetime for the horizontal and vertical retrace of the electron gun in acathode ray tube display. However, with the advent of LCD displays andas retrace speeds have increased in modern monitors, it is now possibleto present a user interface display in this border. The border which canbe controlled as a user interface is a portion of what is known as the“overscan” area. Example embodiments include a method and system forpresenting one or more additional or secondary user interfaces, forexample, in the overscan area surrounding the native user interfacedisplay (the desktop).

When the electron gun in a CRT retraces to the left of the screen or thetop of the screen, it requires a significant amount of time relative tothe presentation of a scanned line of data. During the retrace, theelectron gun is turned off (“blanked”). If the blanking time requiredfor the retrace is equal to the amount of time available, there is nousable overscan. However, modern monitors have become much faster intheir retrace speeds, leaving a significant amount of time when theelectron gun need not be blanked, allowing a displayable border. In theprior art, although the border is usually “black” (the gun is turnedoff), it is well known how to specify that the border shall be given anyone of six colors. Standard BIOS allows a specification of this color.The desired color is simply specified in one of the registers for thevideo controller. Typically no data for this color is stored in thebuffer of video memory for the display. An example embodiment of thepresent invention establishes an additional video buffer for the borderand allows this buffer to be written with display data like the regulardisplay buffer. The additional video buffer is often present but unusedin the graphics systems of most computers because video memory isusually implemented in sizes that are powers of 2, e.g., “512 K”,whereas standard desktop dimensions are not, “e.g., 640×480=300 K”. Thedisplay area is thereby expanded, on one or more edges, to provide avisible area previously invisible. The pixels within this newly visiblearea of the display are made accessible to programs through anapplication programming interface (API) component of example embodimentsof the present invention. A program incorporating a parallel graphicaluser interface may be displayed in the previously blanked area of thedisplay, functionally increasing the accessible area of the displaywithout hardware modification. In other cases the desktop may beincreased or decreased to non-standard sizes to leave open display areafor the parallel graphical user interface.

Example embodiments of the present invention include a method and systemfor displaying an image on a video display system in an area outside ofthe primary display area generated by the video display system byadjusting the video display area to include display memory outside ofpredefined video modes. Two dimensions define the standard display area,each specifying a number of pixels. Selecting a video “mode” specifiesthese dimensions. The method can be accomplished by adjusting parametersfor the video display system to increase the number of pixels in atleast one dimension of the display system. The number of pixels which isadded is less than or equal to the difference between the number ofpixels specified in the video mode and a maximum number of pixels whichthe video display system can effectively display. Any such difference isreferred to here as an overscan area. Thus, the overscan area may be thedifference between the current desktop video mode and the displaycapability of the display device or more specifically, any portion ofvideo memory unused when the operating system is in a given screendimension. Because most interface displays are created by writing adesired image to a buffer or memory for the video display, the methodrequires allocating additional video display memory for the addedpixels. The image written to such memory is then displayed by the systemalongside the original display area.

In other example embodiments, only the vertical dimension is increasedand the parallel or complementary user interface is presented above orbelow the primary display area. Alternatively, the horizontal dimensionmay be increased and the parallel user interface displayed to the rightor the left of the primary display area. Similarly, the parallel userinterface may be displayed on any or all of the four sides of theprimary display area.

In still other example embodiments, a parallel (or complementary) GUI isprovided that includes access to existing search engines and browsers.In another embodiment, the parallel GUI includes a search engine and/orbrowser. A search engine and/or browser may be opened in either theoverscan area or a space within or over the native operating system userinterface.

In still other example embodiments, techniques are provided for addingand using a parallel graphical user interface adjacent to the primarygraphical display user interface even if no overscan area is used. Thesetechniques can be used to increase the overall real estate of thedisplay area whereby the desktop is reduced, scaled, or moved to fit ina smaller or new portion of the total display area. A parallel userinterface can then be displayed in the remaining portion of the totaldisplay area, or in a space within or over the desktop. In oneembodiment, displaying and maintaining the parallel user interface isaccomplished transparent to the user interface of the native operatingsystem by intercepting calls to the video display driver. In someembodiments, techniques are provided for Windows™ environments and forUnix style environments. Other embodiments using similar techniques forother types of environments are also contemplated.

In yet another embodiment, a pixel mask technology is provided forsupporting permitted applications to define, reserve, and use persistentdisplay regions within the native desktop area of the display screen.These persistent display regions mask other output, thus preventing theoutput from the permitted applications to a persistent display regionfrom being obscured by output from other (non-permitted) applications.

In yet another embodiment, a display-trap technology is provided tosupport a video card and driver independent mechanism for reducing thedisplay area allocated to the desktop user interface, so that one ormore parallel user interfaces can be displayed in the remaining area ofthe display screen.

In another embodiment, the methods and systems of the present inventionare combined with voice and video streaming technologies, such asVoIP,IP streaming video, video encoding, video conferencing, andtelevision programming and enabliing technologies, such as EPG and HDTVsupport, to produce applications whose user interfaces communicateoutside of the native desktop area. For example, calendars, calculators,video conferencing applications, phones, etc. can be provided that areenabled to communicate with a user in one or more areas outside, or ontop of, the desktop. In one embodiment, the user interfaces of theseapplications are persistent and operate independently of the nativeoperating system, so that they remain executing, even when the operatingsystem fails. In one embodiment, these applications are combined with amicrokernel that is native operating system independent and can run onany computer system that the microkernel supports, including as anembedded application in a hardware device. In one embodiment, thesetechniques are used to create a webtop interface, which is independentof the desktop and the native operating system.

These and other features and advantages of embodiments of the presentinvention will become further apparent from the detailed description andaccompanying figures and appendices that follow.

DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

Embodiments of the present invention provide methods and systems fordisplaying information on a display surface in a manner that complementsthe display metaphor and technology provided by a native operatingsystem. Using techniques of embodiments of the present invention, acomplementary user interface is made operable within an existing systemor is provided as a stand-alone environment. The complementary userinterface may coexist as one or more secondary graphical user interfaces(“GUIs”) with a primary user interface, such as conventional desktop GUIprovided by the native operating system. The complementary userinterface provided by such embodiments may be used, for example, toprovide additional display screen real estate or to provide quick orcontinuous (“sticky”) access to selected applications. The complementaryuser interface may provide access to a wide variety of capabilities,including, for example, continuous access to a user's favorite networklocations on, for example, the Internet. For example, continuous accessto applications such as a personal information manager, calendar, phone,video conferencing, television programming, etc. may be provided.

Referring now to FIGS. 1 and 2, in a preferred embodiment, programmingmechanisms and interfaces in a video display and control system such ascomputer system 7 or settop box 8 provide one or more parallel GUIs suchas space 2C and/or space 4 in a display area such as display area 1 ordisplay area 9 by providing access and visibility to a portion of thedisplay otherwise ignored and/or inaccessible (an “overscan area”).Display areas such as display area 1 or display area 9 may be created onany type of analog or digital display hardware including but not limitedto CRT, TFT, LCD and flat panel displays.

Alternate display content controller 6 interacts with the computerutility operating system 5B and hardware drivers 5C to controlallocation of display space 1 and create and control one or moreparallel graphical user interfaces such as context sensitive networkbrowser (CSNB) 2 and internet pages 2A and 2B adjacent to the operatingsystem desktop 3. Alternate display content controller 6 may beincorporated in either hardware or software. As software, an alternatedisplay content controller may be an application running on the computeroperating system, or may include an operating system kernel of varyingcomplexity ranging from dependent on the native operating system forhardware system services to a parallel system independent of the nativeoperating system and capable of supporting dedicated applications.Applications enabled with the alternate display content controller alsomay be embedded in various devices. The alternate display contentcontroller may also include content and operating software such as JAVAdelivered over the Internet I, or over any other network.

The alternate display content controller may also be included in atelevision decoder/settop box such as box 8 to permit two or moreparallel graphical user interfaces such as pages 9A and 9B to bedisplayed simultaneously. Methods and systems of the present inventionmay be compatible with conventional television formats such as NTSC,PAL, PAL-C, SECAM and MESECAM. In this configuration content andsoftware may be delivered over any conventional delivery medium 10including but not limited to over the air broadcast signals 10A, cable10C, optical fiber, and satellite 10B.

FIGS. 1 and 2 will be referenced in more detail below.

FIG. 15 shows an example of a standard prior art display desktopgenerated by a Microsoft Windows 95™ operating system. Within thedesktop 31 are the taskbar 32 and desktop icons 33.

In one embodiment of the present invention, a complementary graphicaluser interface image is painted onto one or more of the sides of theoverscan area as shown in FIG. 3. FIG. 3 is a depiction of a Super VGA(SVGA) display with the addition of a graphical bar user interfacedisplayed in the overscan area. The overscan user interface bar 30 isdefined to reside outside the borders of the “desktop” display area 31.In FIG. 16, the display is modified to include a graphical userinterface 30 in a bar 20-pixels high below the bottom edge. In FIG. 3,the display is modified to include a graphical user interface in fourbars each 25-pixels high/wide outside each of the four display edges: abottom bar 30, a left side bar 34, a right side bar 36, and a top bar38. The complementary interface may include, and is not limited to,buttons, menus, application output controls (such as a “ticker window”),animations, and user input controls (such as edit boxes). Because thecomplementary interface is not obscured by other applications runningwithin the standard desktop, the complementary interface may beconstantly visible or it may toggle between visible and invisible statesbased upon any of a number of programming parameters (including, but notlimited to, the state of the active window, the state of a togglebutton, a network message, user preference, etc.).

Also, once the overscan area is allocated or other methods are employedto increase the overall real estate of the display area (or even if thedisplay area remains unchanged in size), the native desktop may bereduced or moved to fit in a smaller or new portion of the total displayarea, leaving any side or other region open for displaying thecomplementary user interface. FIGS. 22-30 illustrate several possibleconfigurations and allocations of the display area to include one ormore complementary user interfaces. These figures illustrate that thecomplementary user interfaces may have heterogeneous styles and sizesand may reside on one or more areas of the overscan area as well aswithin (overlaying) the native GUI (see, for example, menus 2301 in FIG.23). In addition, the desktop may be moved or reduced, as shown in FIG.25 and 30, and used in conjunction with complementary user interfacesthat reside outside of or within the modified desktop. FIG. 25 alsodemonstrates a complementary GUI whose contents can be dynamicallydriven by connecting to a network, such as the Internet. One skilled inthe art will appreciate that any combination of these features ispossible in practicing embodiments of the present invention and thatadditional features may be added within the scope of the presentinvention.

1. Video Display System Environment

FIG. 4 is a block diagram of the basic components of a computer systemvideo display environment that interacts with the methods and systems ofthe present invention. Within the software component S are the nativeoperating system 63 and one or more applications such as application 61.Within the protected modes of modern systems, applications 61 do nothave direct access to the Video or Graphics Drivers 64 or hardwarecomponents such as the video card 66 which contains the video chipset66A, 66B and 66C. Abstraction layers such as Application ProgrammingInterface (API) 60, and/or DirectX API 62, provide limited access, oftenthrough the operating system 63. One such example API is Microsoft'sGDI, which provides graphical display capabilities to applicationsrunning in Microsoft Windows environments.

Embodiments of the present invention provide a technique for paintingand accessing an area of the computer display not accessible, or used,in the native desktop graphics modes. In the Microsoft Windowsenvironments (including Microsoft Window 95 and derivatives, andMicrosoft Windows NT 4.0 and derivatives) and other contemporaryoperating environments, the primary display area desktop is usuallyassigned by the operating system to be one of a set of pre-determinedvideo “modes” such as those laid out in Tables 1 and 2 below, each ofwhich is predefined at a specific pixel resolution. Thus, the accessiblearea of the computer display may not be modified except by selectinganother of the available predefined modes.

TABLE 1 ROM BIOS VIDEO MODES Mode Num- Mode Buffer ber Resolution ColorsType Segment 00H 42 × 25 chars (320 × 350 pixels) 16 Alpha B800 00H 42 ×25 chars (320 × 350 pixels) 16 Alpha B800 00H 42 × 25 chars (320 × 400pixels) 16 Alpha B800 00H 42 × 25 chars (320 × 400 pixels) 16 Alpha B80001H 42 × 25 chars (320 × 200 pixels) 16 Alpha B800 01H 42 × 25 chars(320 × 350 pixels) 16 Alpha B800 01H 42 × 25 chars (320 × 400 pixels) 16Alpha B800 01H 42 × 25 chars (320 × 400 pixels) 16 Alpha B800 02H 80 ×25 chars (640 × 200 pixels) 16 Alpha B800 02H 80 × 25 chars (640 × 350pixels) 16 Alpha B800 02H 80 × 25 chars (640 × 400 pixels) 16 Alpha B80002H 80 × 25 chars (640 × 400 pixels) 16 Alpha B800 03H 80 × 25 chars(640 × 200 pixels) 16 Alpha B800 03H 80 × 25 chars (640 × 350 pixels) 16Alpha B800 03H 80 × 25 chars (640 × 400 pixels) 16 Alpha B800 03H 80 ×25 chars (720 × 400 pixels) 16 Alpha B800 04H 320 × 200 pixels  4Graphics B800 05H 320 × 200 pixels  4 Graphics B800 06H 840 × 200 pixels 2 Graphics B800 07H 80 × 25 chars (720 × 350 pixels)  2 Alpha B000 07H80 × 25 chars (720 × 400 pixels)  2 Alpha B000 0DH 320 × 200 pixels 16Graphics A000 0EH 640 × 200 pixels 16 Graphics A000 0FH 640 × 350 pixels 4 Graphics A000 10H 640 × 350 pixels  4 Graphics A000 10H 640 × 350pixels 16 Graphics A000 11H 640 × 480 pixels  2 Graphics A000 12H 640 ×480 pixels 16 Graphics A000 13H 320 × 200 pixels 256  Graphics A000

TABLE 2 SVGA VIDEO MODES DEFINED IN THE VESA BIOS EXTENSION Mode NumberResolution Mode Colors Buffer Type 100H 640 × 480 pixels 256 Graphics101H 640 × 480 pixels 256 Graphics 102H 800 × 600 pixels 16 Graphics103H 800 × 600 pixels 256 Graphics 104H 1024 × 768 pixels 16 Graphics105H 1024 × 768 pixels 256 Graphics 106H 1280 × 1024 pixels 16 Graphics107H 1280 × 1024 pixels 256 Graphics 108H 80 × 60 chars 16 Alpha 109H132 × 25 chars 16 Alpha 10AH 132 × 43 chars 16 Alpha 10BH 132 × 50 chars16 Alpha 10CH 132 × 60 chars 16 Alpha 10DH 320 × 200 pixels 32,768Graphics 10EH 320 × 200 pixels 65,536 Graphics 10FH 320 × 200 pixels16,777,216 Graphics 110H 640 × 480 pixels 32,768 Graphics 111H 640 × 480pixels 65,536 Graphics 112H 640 × 480 pixels 16,777,216 Graphics 113H800 × 600 pixels 32,768 Graphics 114H 800 × 600 pixels 65,536 Graphics115H 800 × 600 pixels 16,777,216 Graphics 116H 1024 × 788 pixels 32,768Graphics 117H 1024 × 768 pixels 65,536 Graphics 118H 1024 × 768 pixels16,777,216 Graphics 119H 1280 × 1024 pixels 32,768 Graphics 11AH 1280 ×1024 pixels 65,536 Graphics 11BH 1280 × 1024 pixels 16,777,216 Graphics

As shown in FIG. 6, when an image is displayed on a computer display, itis “overscanned”. That is, the displayed video buffer data occupies lessthan the entire drivable screen size. The drivable screen size isdetermined by the total amount of video memory and the operative videodisplay characteristics. The width of the overscan border that can beused for a complementary user interface depends on the amount of thehorizontal overscan 52 reduced by the horizontal blanking 54 and theamount of the vertical overscan 53 reduced by the vertical blanking 55.

In one embodiment, only a border at the bottom of the standard displayarea is used to support a complementary user interface. Consequently,only the vertical control parameters for the cathode ray tube (CRT)controller, shown as Control Registers (CRs) 6H, 16H, 11H, 10H, 12H and15H in FIG. 4 need to be adjusted. These parameters and others are shownin Table 3 below:

TABLE 3 VERTICAL TIMING PARAMETERS FOR CR PROGRAMMING. Register NameDescription  6H Vertical Total Value (total number of scan lines perframe) − 2 The high-order bits of this value are stored in the overflowregisters.  7H Overflow High-order bits from other CR registers. 10HVertical Retrace Start Scan line at which vertical retrace starts. Thehigh-order bits of this value are stored in the overflow registers. 11HVertical Retrace End Only the low-order 4 bits of the actual VerticalRetrace End value are stored. (Bit 7 is set to 1 to write-protectregisters 0 through 7.) 12H Vertical Display End Scan line at whichdisplay on the screen ends. The high-order bits of this value are storedin the overflow registers. 15H Start Vertical Blank Scan line at whichvertical blanking starts. The high order bits of this value are storedin the overflow registers. 16H End Vertical Blank Scan line at whichvertical blanking ends. The high order bits of this value are stored inthe overflow registers. 59H-5AH Linear Address Window Linear addresswindow position Position in 32-bit CPU address space.

In the standard 640×480 graphics mode, the nominal horizontal scan rateis 31.5 KHz (31,500 times per second) with a vertical scan rate of 60 Hz(60 frames per second). So the number of lines in one frame is31,500/60, or 525. Because only 480 lines of data need to be displayed,there are 525-480, or 45, lines available for vertical overscan. Leavinga more than adequate margin for retrace, which requires only 2 linesworth of time, the preferred embodiment uses 25 lines for the alternatedisplay. Thus the additional 18 unused but available lines may be usedto increase the size of the native operating system desktop to somenon-standard size while still allowing two lines for retrace, or may beleft blank, or may be used for one or more additional alternate paralleluser interface displays. Similarly, the 1024×768 graphics mode may havea nominal horizontal scan rate of 68.7 KHz with a vertical scan rate of85 Hz which computes to 808 lines per frame or 40 lines available forvertical overscan. By modifying the vertical scan rate down to 60 Hz,the frame size increases to 1145 lines which includes 377 linesavailable for vertical overscan.

2. Modifying the Video Display Area to Support a Complementary GUI

The information display methods of an embodiment of the presentinvention that uses the physical overscan area to increase displayscreen real estate can be achieved by providing three capabilities:

(1) to address and modify the visible resolution of the video displaysystem such that portions of the overscan area are made visible as shownin FIG. 6,

(2) to address and modify the video display contents for the visibleportion of the overscan area, and

(3) to provide an application programming interface (API) or othermechanism to allow applications to implement this functionality.

FIG. 7, and the additional details and steps provided in FIGS. 8-13,provides example flow diagrams of an implementation of an embodiment ofthe present invention that meets the capabilities described above. Theenvironment for this example implementation is a standard MicrosoftWindows 95™ operating environment, using Microsoft Visual C andMicrosoft MASM with Microsoft's standard platform Software Developer'sKit (SDK) and Device Driver Kit (DDK) for the development platform. Oneskilled in the art will recognize that other embodiments can perform onother other platforms and within other environments. For example,embodiments could be implemented within any graphical interfaceenvironment, such as X-Windows, OSF Motif, Apple Macintosh OS, a JavaOS, and others in which similar video standards (VGA, SVGA, XGA, SXGA,UXGA, 8514/A) are practiced. The reference books PC Video Systems byRichard Wilton, published by Microsoft Press and Programmer's Guide tothe EGA, VGA, and Super VGA Cards by Richard F. Ferrano, published byAddison Wesley, herein incorporated by reference in their entirety,provide more than adequate background information to implement anembodiment in a Windows environment.

As noted earlier, the methods and systems of the present invention alsoprovide other techniques, such as emulation mode, for the alternatedisplay content controller to effectively increase the size of thedisplay area available to parallel user interfaces, by sharing theusable display area between the native GUI and the parallel userinterfaces . Emulation mode operates by either effectively shrinkingdown the portion of the display area allocated to the primary GUI, or byeffectively increasing the resolution to a standard or non-standardresolution and utilizing the increase without offering any of theincrease to the primary GUI. Emulation mode, as discussed in detail withrespect to FIG. 14, provides hooks into the video driver and controlswhat resolution and portion of the screen is allocated to the primaryGUI and what is allocated to the parallel GUIs. Note that, regardless ofwhether overscan techniques are used to increase the displayable area,emulation mode can be used to share the display area between a primaryGUI and one or more parallel GUIs.

If the alternate display content controller determines that neitheroverscan techniques nor emulation mode can be used to display acomplementary GUI, then it attempts to use a standard windowed modeprovided by the native operating system or primary GUI.

In summary, the alternate display content controller determines how toincrease the display area to utilize a complementary GUI, either byincreasing the addressable area of the display (e.g., using the overscanarea or by using emulation mode and increasing the resolution) or bydecreasing the portion of the display usable by the primary GUI, suchthat remaining display area can be used by one or more complementaryGUIs. Use of the overscan area is not automatic—the hardware andsoftware system needs to be accessible to some degree in order to dothis (either by knowledge of the video driver and hardware or by aseries of heuristics). Several mechanisms can be used to determinewhether an overscan technique can be used and are discussed in detailbelow. If no overscan techniques are usable in a particular videodisplay scenerio, then the alternate display content controllerdetermines whether an “emulation” mode can be used, which shares theresolution of the video display between the primary and any parallel(complementary) GUIs, effectively creating an accessible overscan area.

2.1 Techniques for Extending the Display Area into the Physical OverscanArea (Overscan Mode)

Referring now in particular to FIG. 7, upon initialization, the programdetermines the screen borders to be accessed in Identify Borders ToDisplay, step 106, based on user preferences and program configuration,and determines, as necessary, whether sufficient video memory exists tomake the necessary display changes in the overscan area, step 106. Forexample, if the screen is currently set to a 1024×768 resolution at16-bits-per-pixel, and the program is to include four graphicalinterfaces, one on each edge, with each bar 20 pixels deep, the programmust check that video memory is greater than 1.7 MB (required number ofbytes = pixels width*Bits Per Pixel*Pixels Height). This calculation isneeded only when one or more bars may be displayed on the overscanscreen. If the calculation fails to determine that sufficient videomemory exists to display the bar or bars in the overscan area, theprogram proceeds to run in emulation mode. At Identify Display Type,step 102, the program attempts to determine the display type and currentlocation in memory used by the display driver, in order to determine thesize and locations of any display modifications to be made, e.g., to thesize and location of overscan area(s) to be used.

As described in further detail in FIG. 8, the program first queries thehardware registry in Query Hardware Registry, step 131, to attempt todetermine the registered display type. If successful, the program thendetermines compatibility information in Display Type Supported, step135, to verify that the program supports that display type and determinememory allocation information.

If the hardware registry information is unavailable, as determined instep 131, or the display type determined in step 131 is unsupported asdetermined by step 104, the program may use an alternate approach, shownas subroutine Query hardware, steps 135 in FIG. 8, to query the BIOS, instep 134, and the video chipset 66, in step 136, for similar informationas described immediately below.

If the BIOS is to be accessed in step 134, physical memory is firstallocated in Allocate Physical Memory, step 132, and accessed usingMicrosoft's DPMI (DOS Protected Mode Interface) to map it to the linearmemory address in which the BIOS resides. It uses DPMI to assign BIOSlinear address to physical memory, step 133.

Thereafter, the program queries the BIOS in Read BIOS block, Search forVGA/XVA type and manufacturer ID, step 134. If successful, the driverand chipset are then further queried to determine the display type andmemory location in Query driver/chipset for exact chipset, step 136.

If the compatibility information does not indicate a standard VGA, SVGA,XGA, SXGA, UXGA, or 8514/A signature, step 134, this routine returns afailure. If a known chipset manufacturer's identification is found, thedriver and/or chipset may be queried with manufacturer-specificroutines, step 136, to identify and initialize, as necessary, thespecific chipset.

If, in determining the display type, the program identifies a videodevice driver that is supported by the xSides™ Video Driver Extensions(VDE), the program will use the VDE to implement overscan mode andproceed to run. The xSides™ VDE are extensions that can be implementedby video device driver suppliers to more transparently and congruentlysupport the xSides™ environment.

If, at step 104, the program was unable to finally identify the displaytype, either because the registry query in step 131 or the hardwarequery in step 135 was unsuccessful, the program will proceed to run in“emulation” mode.

Returning to FIG. 7, if the program has not already determined that itmust proceed in “emulation” mode, it must determine whether it canproceed in “overscan” mode, step 104. There are a number of mechanismsby which this may be done. A set of classes is used, all derived from acommon base class corresponding to the below-described VGA-generictechnique.

The first mechanism is an implementation of the VGA-generic technique.Using this mechanism, no information specific to a video-card isnecessary, other than ensuring VGA support. Using standard applicationprogramming interface (API) routines, primary and secondary surfaces areallocated.

Allocation of the primary surface will always be based on the entirescreen display. Given the linear address of the allocated primarysurface, from which a physical address can be derived, it can beextrapolated that the physical address of the location in video memoryimmediately adjacent to the primary surface, and therefore immediatelybelow the desktop display, is represented by the sum of the number ofbytes of memory used to maintain the primary surface in memory added tothe physical address of the primary surface.

Once the physical address of the primary surface is known, the size ofthe primary surface as represented in video memory can be determined.

For example, the system looks in the CRs for the resolution of thescreen, 800 by 600, in terms of number of bits per pixel, or bytes perpixel. Then any data stored in the CR representing any horizontal strideis included. This is the true scan line length.

Next, the physical address of the allocated secondary surface is derivedfrom its linear address. In the case where the allocated secondarysurface is, in fact, allocated in the memory space contiguous to theprimary surface (the value of the secondary surface physical address isequal to the value of the primary surface physical address plus the sizeof the primary), the secondary surface is determined to be the locationin memory for the overscan display.

If, however, the above is not true and the secondary surface is notcontiguous to the primary surface, another approach mechanism isrequired. For example, a mechanism that “frees” memory from the videodevice driver to gain contiguous memory by effectively modifying ormoving video device driver data may be used. This mechanism may use aninterrupt routine to move the driver data transparently.

For example, if the program can identify the Interrupt Descriptor Table(IDT) from the Intel 80386 (or greater and compatible) processors, theprogram can use the Debug Registers (DRs) to move the driver data foundbetween the primary and secondary display surfaces to a location furtherdown the video memory, making the contiguous memory space available tothe program.

The IDT associates each interrupt with a descriptor for the instructionsthat service the associated event. For example, when a softwareinterrupt (INT 3) is generated (and interrupts are enabled), the Intelprocessor will suspend what it was currently doing, look up in the IDTfor the appropriate entry (or interrupt vector) for the address of thecode to execute to service this interrupt. The code is known as theInterrupt Service Routine (ISR). It will start executing the ISR. When aReturn From Interrupt instruction (IRET) is executed by the ISR, theprocessor will resume what is was doing prior to the interrupt.

Intel 80386 microprocessors (or greater and compatible) provide a set ofsystem registers that are normally used for debugging purposes. Theseare technically referred to as the Debug Registers (DRs). The DRs allowcontrol over execution of code as well as access over data. The DRs areused in conjunction with exception code. There are four addressesregisters (i.e., Four different locations of code and/or data) (DR0,DR1, DR2, and DR3).

The controlling register (DR7) can be programmed to selectively enablethe address registers. In addition, DR7 is used to control the type ofaccess to a memory location that will generate an interrupt. Forexample, an exception can be raised for reading and or writing aspecific memory location or executing a memory location (i.e., Codeexecution).

Finally, the status register (DR6) is used to detect and determine thedebug exception, (i.e., which address register generated the exception).When enabled and the data criterion is met, the x86 processor generatesan Interrupt 1 (INT 1).

One example implementation of the alternate display content controllerpreferably first sets up the IDT to point a new ISR to process INT 1interrupts. Next, the address of the code to be hooked (or the memorylocation of data) is programmed into one of the address registers andthe appropriate bits within the control register are set. When the x86processor executes this instruction (or touches the memory location ofdata), the processor generates an INT 1. The processor will then invokethe Interrupt 1 ISR (as described above.) At this point, the ISR can doalmost any kind of processor, code or data manipulation. When complete,the ISR executes an IRET instruction and the processor starts executionafter the point of the INT 1 occurrence. The interrupt code has noknowledge of the interruption. This mechanism is used in the exampleimplementation to move the memory address for the video cache and thehardware cursor.

To summarize, the first mechanism for determining whether or notoverscan is supported determines how much physical area to allocate forthe desktop, allowing adjacent area for parallel GUI secondary spacebeyond that to display in the overscan area. The newly allocated areawill be the very first block of memory available. If this blockimmediately follows the primary surface, the physical address willcorrespond to the value associated with the physical address of theprimary surface, plus the size of the primary surface. If that is true,the memory blocks are contiguous, this VGA-generic mechanism can be usedto proceed with overscan mode, and the program returns true in step 104of FIG. 7.

If this first, VGA-generic mechanism cannot be used, the video card anddriver name and version information retrieved from the hardware registryor BIOS, as described earlier, is used in conjunction with a look-uptable to determine the best alternatives among the remaining mechanisms.The table includes a set of standards keyed to the list of driver namesfound in the hardware registry. A class object specific to the videochipset is instantiated based, directly or indirectly, on theVGA-generic object.

If the hardware look up does not result in a reliable match, areliability, or confidence, fudge factor may be used. For example, ifthe hardware look up determines that an XYZ-brand device of some kind isbeing used, but the particular XYZ device named is not found in the lookup table, a generic model from that chipset manufacturer many often beusable. If no information on the video card is available, the programreturns false in step 104 of FIG. 7 and will not proceed in overscanmode.

The next alternative mechanism for determining overscan mode supportuses surface overlays. The first step to this approach is to determineif the system will support surface overlays. A call is made to the videodriver to determine what features are supported and what other factorsare required. If surface overlays are supported, for example, there maybe a scaling factor required.

For example, a particular video card in a given machine, using 2megabytes of video RAM, might support unscaled surface overlays at1024×768 at 8 bits per pixel, but not at 1024×768 at 16 bits per pixelbecause the bandwidth of the video card or the speed of the card,coupled with the relatively small amount of video memory would not besufficient to draw a full width overlay. It is often horizontal scalingthat is at issue, preventing the driver from drawing a full widthoverlay. An overlay is literally an image that is drawn on top of theprimary surface. It is not a secondary surface, which is describedabove. Typically, the system sends its signal from the video driver tothe hardware which in turn merges the two signals together, overlayingthe second signal on top of the first.

If a system cannot support unscaled overlays, perhaps because ofbandwidth issues or memory issues, this mechanism is not desirable. Itis not rejected, but becomes a lower priority alternative. For example,if the scaling factor is below 0.1, then the normal bar can be drawn andit will be clipped closer to the edge. If the scaling factor is morethan 10%, another approach mechanism is required.

In the next set of alternative mechanisms, a secondary surface isallocated sufficient in size to encompass the normal desktop displayarea plus the overscan area to be used for display of the overscan baror bars. Using these mechanisms, the allocated secondary surface doesnot have to be located contiguous in memory to the primary surface.However, these approaches use more video memory than the others.

The first step is to allocate a secondary surface sufficient in size tocontain the video display (the primary surface) plus the overscan areato be used. If the allocation fails, that means that there is not enoughvideo memory to accomplish the task and this set of mechanisms isskipped and the next alternative tried. After the new block of memory isallocated, a timer of very small granularity is used to execute a simplememory copy of the contents of the primary surface onto the appropriatelocation of this secondary surface. The timer executes the copy atapproximately 85 times per second.

Another mechanism for determining overscan mode support is a variantthat uses the system page tables to find addresses that correspond tothe graphical display interface of the native operating system, such asWindows' GDI. One skilled in the art will recognize that similar methodscan be used in systems with other graphical display interfaces to videodevice drivers. The system page table mechanism queries the system pagetables to determine the current GDI surface address, that is, thephysical address in the page table for the primary surface. A secondarysurface is then created large enough to hold all of what is in the videomemory plus the memory required for the overscan area to be displayed.This surface address is then pushed into the system page table andasserted as the GDI surface address.

Thereafter, when GDI reads from or writes to the primary surface throughthe driver, it actually reads from or writes to a location within thenew, larger surface. The program can, subsequently, modify the area ofthe surface not addressed by GDI. The original primary surface can bede-allocated and the memory usage reclaimed. This mechanism, being morememory-efficient than the previously described mechanism, is thepreferred alternative. But this mechanism, modifying the page tables,will not work correctly on a chipset that includes a coprocessor device.If the initial device query reveals that the device does include acoprocessor, this variant mechanism will not be attempted.

Other variations of the above-described mechanisms for determiningoverscan mode support are handled by derived class objects. For example,the VGA-generic mechanisms may vary when the video card requires morethan ten bits to represent the video resolution in the CR. Someinstances may require 11 bits. Such registers typically do not usecontiguous bytes, but use extension bits to designate the addressinformation for the higher order bits. In this example, the eleventh bitis usually specified in an extended CR register and the extended CRregisters are usually chip specific.

Similarly, a variation of the surface overlay mechanism includes ascaling factor, as described above. This alternative is handled inspecific implementations through derived class objects and may be thepreferred solution in certain situations.

If any of the above-described mechanisms used to determine if overscanmode is supported and subsequently to initialize overscan mode returns afailure, another mode, such as “emulation” mode or “windowed” mode maybe used instead.

If the program is to proceed in “overscan” mode, the ControllerRegisters, or CRs, must first be unlocked, as indicated in Unlock CRTCregisters, step 108 in FIG. 7, to make them writeable. The controllerregisters 6H, 16H, 11H, 10H, 12H and 15H as shown in FIG. 4 and detailedin Table 3 , may be accessed through standard input/output ports, usingstandard inp/outp functions. They are unlocked by clearing bit 7 incontroller register 11H.

Addressing of video memory, step 112, is accomplished through one ofseveral means. One is to use the standard VGA 64 Kb “hardware window”,moving it along the video memory buffer 66B (FIG. 4) in 64 Kb incrementsas necessary. One example method is to enable linear addressing byquerying the video chipset for the linear window position address, step138 of FIG. 11. This 32-bit offset in memory allows the program to mapthe linear memory to a physical address, steps 140 and 142 of FIG. 11,that can be manipulated programmatically.

At this point the program can modify the size of the display, step 114of FIG. 7 to include the border areas. Changing the display resolutionto modify the size of the display is shown in detail in FIG. 9. In FIG.9, the routine first checks to determine whether or not the system isrunning in “emulation” mode, step 144, and, if so, returns true. If not,it then determines whether to reset all registers and values to theiroriginal state, effectively returning the display to its originalappearance, steps 148-154. The determination is based upon a number ofparameters, such as whether the current resolution, step 146, reflects astandard value or previous programmatic manipulation, step 148. If astandard resolution is already set, the variables are reset to includethe specified border areas, step 150. If not, the registers are reset tostandard values. In both cases the CR registers are adjusted, step 154,to modify the scanned and blanked areas of the display. If the top orside areas are modified, existing video memory is moved accordingly instep 162 of FIG. 10.

If any of the foregoing routines returns a failure, the program mayproceed to run in “emulation” mode, step 113 of FIG. 7, if possible, orin windowed mode, step 116 of FIG. 7.

Overscan mode, in the present invention, can be viewed as techniques foradding a secondary GUI by reconfiguring the actual display mode to add amodified, non-standard GUI mode in which the standard display size orresolution has been adjusted to include a secondary display in additionto the primary display. For example, a standard 640×480 display ismodified in accordance with techniques of the present invention tobecome a larger display, one section of which corresponds to theoriginal 640×480 display while another section may correspond to a640×25 secondary GUI display.

In another embodiment of the present invention system, resources areallocated for a secondary GUI by fooling the video driver into going tolarger resolution. This technique guarantees that enough video memory isallocated and unused, since the video driver allocates system resourcesaccording to the resolution that the video driver believes it will beoperating in. To operate one or more secondary user interfaces in one ormore areas of the screen it is necessary to have the memory within videomemory or the frame buffer that is associated with the display locationthat is contiguously below the primary surface be free and available. Byutilizing a series of small routines specific to hardware known to havesystem resource allocation problems for a secondary user interface, theprogram may execute such routine whenever resolutions will be switched,initializing the chipset pertinent to that particular routine. If theprogram finds a routine pertinent to the current particular chipset itwill be launched. The routine initializes itself, performs the necessarychanges to the driver's video resolution tables, forces a reenable, andsufficient space is subsequently available for one or more secondaryuser interfaces.

When reenabled, the video driver allocates video memory as needed forthe primary display according to the data on the video resolutiontables. Therefore, the modified values result in a larger allocation.Once the video driver has allocated memory necessary for the primarysurface, the driver will allow no outside modification of the allocatedmemory. Thus by fooling the driver into believing that it needs toallocate sufficient memory for a resolution exactly x bytes larger thanthe current resolution where x is the size of one or more secondary userinterfaces, the program can be sure that no internal or external use ofthe allocated memory space can conflict with the secondary userinterface.

Fooling the driver into allocating the additional resources can also bedone by modifying each instance of the video driver's advertised videomode tables and thus creating a screen size larger than the primary userinterface screen size. This technique eliminates the need to prevent thedriver from actually shifting into the specified larger resolution andhanding the primary user interface a larger display surface resolution.When the video driver validates the new resolution, it will checkagainst a hardware mode table, which has not been updated with the newresolution. (The “hardware mode table,” a variant of the aforementionedvideo resolution tables, is not advertised and not accessible.) Thisvalidation, thus, will always fail and the video driver will refuse toshift into that resolution. But, because this technique modified theadvertised video mode (resolution) tables early enough in the driver'sprocess, the amount of allocated memory was modified, and memoryaddresses were set before the failure occurred during the validationprocess. Subsequently when the CRTCs are modified, in step 114, thedriver has already reserved sufficient memory for one or more secondaryuser interfaces, which is not available to any other process or purpose.

In yet another embodiment of the present invention, an enveloping driveris installed to sit above the actual (primary) video driver and shimsitself in between the hardware abstraction layer and the primary videodriver in order to be able to handle all calls to the primary driver.This technique modifies the primary driver and its tables in a much moregeneric fashion rather than in a chipset specific fashion. Theenveloping driver shims into the primary video driver, transparentlyhandling calls back and forth to the primary video driver. Theenveloping driver finds the video resolution tables in the primary videodriver, which may be in a number of locations within the driver. Theenveloping driver modifies the tables (for example, increasing 800×600to 800×625). A 1024×768 table entry may become, for example, an 1024×800entry.

Like the previously described technique for fooling the video driver,the primary video driver cannot validate the new resolution andtherefore cannot actually change the display resolution setting. As aresult, the primary video driver has allocated memory, allocated thecache space, determined memory addresses and moved cache and offscreenbuffers as necessary, but is unable to use all of the space allocated,or draw into that space.

2.2 Techniques for Sharing the Display Area (Emulation Mode)

Emulation mode uses a “hooking” mechanism, as shown in FIG. 14, to useand reallocate display areas and driver resources. After the videodevice driver is identified through the hardware registry or the BIOS,e.g., as described above, certain programming interface entry pointsinto the driver are hooked, such as in step 117, to control parameterspassed to and from the driver. When the operating system's graphicaldevice interface, for example GDI, calls those entry points into thevideo device driver, the alternate display content controller modifiesthe parameters being passed to the driver, and/or modifies the valuesbeing returned from the driver, thereby controlling the attributes ofthe display communicated back to the native operating system's graphicaldevice interface. The program thus “hooks” (or intercepts) calls to thevideo device driver to and from the graphical device interface.

For example, by hooking the “ReEnable” function in the display driver,at step 117, the program can allocate screen area in different ways instep 119:

(1) In step-up mode, step 121, by intercepting a resolution changerequest and identifying the next-higher supported screen resolution andpassing that higher resolution to the video device driver and when thedriver acknowledges the change, intercepting the returned value, whichwould reflect the new resolution, and actually returning the originalrequested resolution instead. For example, when GDI requests a changefrom 640×480 resolution to 800×600resolution; the program intercepts therequest and modifies it to change the video device driver to the nextsupported resolution higher than 800×600, say 1024×768. The driver willchange the screen resolution to 1024×768 and return that new resolution.The program intercepts the return and instead passes the originalrequest, 800×600, to GDI. The video device driver has allocated anddisplays a 1024×768 area of memory. GDI and the native OS will displaythe desktop in an 800×600area of the display, leaving areas on the rightand bottom edges of the screen available to the program.

(2) In share mode, step 123, the program intercepts only the return fromthe video device driver and modifies the value to change the graphicaldevice interface's understanding of the actual screen resolution. Forexample, when GDI requests a change from 800×600resolution to 1024×768resolution, the program intercepts the returned acknowledgment,subtracting a predetermined amount, for example, 32, before passing thereturn on to GDI. The video device driver has allocated and displays a1024×768 area of memory. GDI will display the desktop in an 1024×736area of the display, leaving an area on the bottom edge of the screenavailable to the program.

(3) In step-down mode, step 125, the program performs the reverse ofstep-up mode: that is, the program intercepts a resolution changerequest; requests the resolution change, but returns the next lowerresolution to the graphical device interface. For example, when GDIrequests a change from 640×480 resolution to 800×600resolution; theprogram intercepts the request and modifies it to change the videodevice driver to 800×600. The video device driver will change the screenresolution to 800×600and returns that new resolution. The programintercepts the return and instead passes a next lower resolution,640×480 (denying the request), to GDI. The driver has allocated anddisplays a 800×600area of memory. GDI and the native OS will display thedesktop in an 640×480 area of that display, leaving areas on the rightand bottom edges of the screen available to the overscan program.

An alternative to these hooking mechanisms would hook all of thenecessary video device driver functions to modify the X,Y offsets usedfor specific GDI functions. Effectively, this moves the GDI display areawithin the larger screen display area. This mechanism allows thecreation of emulation mode space on the top and left edges by sharingsome or all of the space initially created for the bottom and/or rightedges.

If the video device driver cannot be hooked, as described above,“emulation” mode cannot be supported and the program will proceed to runin “windowed” mode as described with reference to step 116 of FIG. 7.Windowed mode will use established API routines to the native operatingsystem GUI to run as an “application toolbar” within the standard windowdisplay area. Running as a standard application enables the program totake advantage of mechanisms available to all applications on the nativeOS, such as window creation, docking toolbar interfaces, etc., andallows the program to run under standard conditions.

In summary, the alternate display content controller determines how toincrease the display area to utilize a complementary GUI, either byincreasing the addressable area of the display (e.g., using the overscanarea or by using emulation mode and increasing the resolution) or bydecreasing the portion of the display usable by the primary GUI, suchthat remaining display area can be used by one or more complementaryGUIs. If no overscan techniques are usable in a particular video displayscenerio, then the alternate display content controller determineswhether an “emulation” mode can be used, which shares the resolution ofthe video display between the primary and any secondary (complementary)GUIs.

3. Rendering Images to the Modified Display Area

Phase 2 of the example embodiments of the present invention begins bypainting the new images into an off-screen buffer, step 118, as iscommonly used in the art, and making the contents visible, step 120, asdescribed with respect to FIG. 10.

After determining and initializing the program mode, the program candisplay data by any of these techniques, as appropriate:

(1) Using standard API calls to render the data to an off-screen buffer,as described in the next section, and then hooking the “BitBlt” functionentry point into the display driver in order to modify the offset andsize parameters, the program subsequently redirect the BitBlt to thearea outside of that which the API believes is onscreen.

(2) Using mechanisms of primary and secondary surface addresses,described above, the program determines the linear addresses for theoff-desktop memory location(s) left available to it, and can renderdirectly to those memory locations as shown in steps 158 and 142 of FIG.11 and step 154 of FIG. 10.

(3) Using video device driver escapes, a standard mechanism within thedomain of device driver interfaces, the program can blit directly to thevideo buffer.

(4) If the program is in “windowed” mode, step 156, the off-screenbuffer is painted into the standard window client space, step 166, andmade visible, step 164, using generic windowing-system routines.

4. Event Handling in Conjunction With the Modified Video Display Area

A preferred embodiment of the program includes a standard applicationmessage loop, step 122, which processes system and user events. Anexample of a minimum functionality process loop is in FIG. 12. Here thealternate display content controller handles a minimal set of systemevents, such as painting requests, step 170, system resolution changes,step 172, and activation/deactivation, step 174. Here, too, is whereuser events, such as key or mouse events, may be handled, step 184,detailed in FIG. 13. System paint messages are handled by painting asappropriate into the off-screen buffer, step 178, and painting thewindow or display buffer, step 180, as appropriate, as described earlierin FIG. 10. System resolution messages are received whenever the systemor user changes the screen or color resolution. The program resets allregisters and/or hooks, as approriate for the current modes, to thecorrect new values, then changes the display resolution, step 182, asearlier described in FIG. 9, to reflect the new resolution modified.User messages can be ignored when the program is not the activeapplication.

FIG. 13 describes a method of implementing user-input events. In thisembodiment, there are three alternative mechanisms used to implementcursor or mouse support so that the user has a pointing device inputtool within the alternate display content controller area userinterface.

According to one preferred mechanism, GDI's “cliprect” is modified toencompass the bar's display area. That keeps the operating system fromclipping the cursor as it moves into the overscan area. This changedoesn't necessarily make the cursor visible or provide event feedback tothe application, but is the first step.

Some current Windows applications continually reset the cliprect. It isa standard programming procedure to reset the cliprect after use or lossof input focus. Some applications use the cliprect to constrain themouse to a specific area as may be required by the active application.Whenever the program receives the input focus it reasserts the cliprect,making it large enough for the mouse to travel down into the programdisplay space.

Once the cliprect has been expanded, the mouse can generate messages tothe operating system reflecting motion within the expansion area. GDIdoes not draw the cursor outside what it understands to be itsresolution, however, and does not pass “out-of-bounds” event messages onto an application. The preferred program uses a V×D device driver, andrelated callback functions, to make hardware driver calls at ring zeroto monitor the actual physical deltas, or changes, in the mouse positionand state. Every mouse position or state change is returned as an eventto the program which can graphically represent the position within thedisplay space.

An alternative mechanism avoids the need to expand the cliprect in orderto avoid conflict with a class of device drivers that use the cliprectto facilitate virtual display panning. Querying the mouse input devicedirectly the program can determine “delta's”, changes in position andstate. Whenever the cursor touches the very last row or column of pixelson the standard display, it is constrained there by setting the cliprectto a rectangle comprised of only that last row or column. A “virtual”cursor position is derived from the deltas available from the inputdevice. The actual cursor is hidden and a virtual cursor representationis explicitly displayed at the virtual coordinates to provide accuratefeedback to the user. If the virtual coordinates move back onto thedesktop from the overscan area, the cliprect is cleared, the virtualrepresentation removed, and the actual cursor restored onto the screen.

A third alternative mechanism creates a transparent window that overlapsthe actual Windows desktop display area by a predefined number ofpixels, for example, two or four pixels. If the mouse enters that small,transparent area, the program hides the cursor. A cursor image is thendisplayed within the overscan bar area, at the same X-coordinate but ata Y-coordinate correspondingly offset into the overscan area. If atwo-pixel overlap area is used, this method uses a granularity of two.Accordingly, this API-only approach provides only limited verticalgranularity. This alternative mechanism assures that all implementationswill have some degree of mouse-input support, even when cliprect andinput device driver solutions fail.

Similarly, the keyboard input can be trapped whenever the mouse isdetermined to be within the program's display space. Using standardhooking mechanisms available to the native OS and graphical userinterface, or alternatively a hook directly unto the keyboard driver,key events can be trapped and processed whenever the program determinesto do so (e.g., when the user moves the mouse onto the program displayspace). When the key input is trapped, other applications can beprevented from viewing keyboard events. If the keyboard driver itself ishooked, even GDI does not get the key input events.

FIG. 7 also describes the cleanup mechanisms executed when the programis closed, step 124. The display is reset to the original resolution,step 126, and the CR registers are reset to their original values, step128, and locked, step 130.

5. Rendering Into and Accessing the Modified Display Area

Various techniques can be used by applications, in addition oralternatively, as appropriate, to render into and access the modifieddisplay area once it has been created. As previously discussed, in oneembodiment, an API to the functionality of the alternate display contentcontroller is provided to applications to enable them to use graphicsprimitives that fully function within a display area that potentiallyextends past the display area originally allocated to the nativedesktop. Several embodiments of these API are provided to supportapplications in differing system environments and to achieve differentfunctions. These embodiments allow communications with the modifieddisplay area from an application to be as transparent as possible, sothat the application does not need to know whether it is communicatingto an area allocated to the desktop or to an area outside of thatallocated to the desktop.

5.1 Techniques for Rendering to a Modified Display in Windows™ LikeEnvironments

In one embodiment, the alternative display content controller providesan API that intercepts and routes all of the calls to a graphics deviceinterface (GDI) invoked by an application to communicate with thedisplay. For example, in the Windows™ environment, the alternate displaycontent controller intercepts all function calls to the GDI applicationprogramming interface (API). The controller determines, based upon thecoordinates of the window being written to, whether the call should beforwarded to a display driver that can output to an overscan area (acomplementary GUI display driver), or whether the call should beforwarded to the native graphics device interface. One skilled in theart will recognize that other combinations are possible, such as partprocessing of the request by the complementary GUI display driver beforeforwarding the request to the native graphics display driver

FIG. 37 is an example block diagram of applications using techniquesthat intercept native graphics interface library calls. In FIG. 37,applications 3701 and 3702 are shown making a call to a function of theAPI of a graphics device interface after loading the GDI code (GDI32.DLL). Application 3701 is an application which uses the alternatedisplay content controller API (referred to here, for example, as the“xSides” API) to render using techniques of a complementary GUI into theextended display area (e.g., the display area outside of the nativedesktop rectangle). Application 3702 is a standard Windows™ application.The alternate display content controller 3703 intercepts the call, anddetermines whether to forward it to a display driver enabled with thetechniques of the present invention 3704, or (/and) to a native displaydriver (e.g., Windows™ GDI) 3705. One skilled in the art will recognizethat this interception technique will work with other graphics deviceinterfaces that are loaded dynamically and that define a documented API,for example, the USER 32.DLL of other Windows™ environments.

Using GDI, this interception technique is accomplished by foolingapplications into loading a complementary GUI-enabled graphics deviceinterface library (e.g., xSides GDI) instead of the native operatingsystem graphics device interface library (e.g., GDI). Specifically, uponsystem initialization, the alternate display content controller renamesthe native graphics device interface library (e.g., “MS GDI 32.DLL”) andnames its own graphics device interface library (the overscan-enabledGDI) into the name of the native graphics device interface library(e.g., xSides GDI is renamed “GDI.DLL”). When the alternate displaycontent controller's library loads and initializes, it loads the nativegraphics device interface library, thereby linking directly into thenative GUI capabilities. Thereafter, applications transparently call thealternate display content controller, even if they are only invokingroutines of the native graphics interface device library.

When an application makes a function call to the new graphics library(e.g., the GDI.DLL shown as 3703), the library needs to determinewhether to invoke the API that is extended display area-enabled (xGDI)or to invoke the native GDI. One skilled in the art will recognize thatthere are various ways to make this determination. Using one method, atinitialization, an application that uses xGDI registers itself bycalling an initialization routine of xGDI, so the alternate displaycontent controller knows which applications actually use the xGDI API.Therefore, xGDI knows when an application that is not xGDI-enabled(e.g., application 3702) is making a function call to the new graphicslibrary, and the call can immediately be forwarded on to the native GDI(e.g., “MS GDI 32.DLL”). When, on the other hand, an application that isxGDI-enabled (e.g., application 3701) makes a function call to the newgraphics library, the xGDI routines can determine whether the locationreferred to in the call (relative to where the pointer was located whenthe call was made) is within the native desktop rectangle or outside ofit in the extended display area.

Using another method, the alternate display content controller may allowan application to write into the extended display area regardless ofwhether it has “registered” itself with xGDI. For example, anapplication such as a calculator may be initially launched in the nativedesktop area and then dragged using a mouse into the extended displayarea. In this case, the extended display area-enabled API cantransparently translate the applications calls relative to new origincoordinates in order to render into the extended display area.

One technique for accomplishing this transparent translation is tointercept every call to the native GDI that causes a repaint or arefresh to occur, translate the coordinates and draw into offscreenmemory, and then render the offscreen memory contents into the extendeddisplay area. One disadvantage of using this technique is that itconsumes more memory and has a small performance hit during eachpaint/refresh (it draws twice for each call).

A second technique for accomplishing this transparent translation is totranslate each native GDI function call to an extended displayarea-enabled function call and to then translate coordinates in eachcall. For example, the “CreateWindow” function call of GDI forwards toan “XCreateWindow” function call. One difficulty of using this techniqueis that the alternate display content controller becomes sensitive tomodified versions of the native GDI.

5.2 Techniques to Prevent Obscuring Data

In one embodiment, techniques of the present invention provide amechanism by which arbitrary rectangular regions of a native desktopdisplay can be reserved for a specific application, allowing thecreation and presentation of persistent images that cannot be obscuredby any other application. These rectangular regions are called PixelMasks, because they are masks on the pixels in the region. Thesetechniques are provided via software tools and libraries andcomplementary documentation, which enable applications developers tobuild applications with persistent presence on the native desktop.

In an example embodiment implemented in the Windows™ environment, thePixel Mask software is implemented using a variation of the displaydriver of the alternate display content controller Essentially, thedisplay driver is augmented to provide a new feature, that of creatingand defining Pixel Masks and authorizing sources. The display driver isaugmented by inserting a filter layer between the native operatingsystem's graphics device interface (e.g., Windows™ GDI) and the displaydriver.

FIG. 32 is an example block diagram of an application using pixel masktechnology in conjunction with an extended display area-enabled displaydriver. In FIG. 32, the Pixel Mask software is shown residing betweenthe enabled display driver 3202 and the native graphics device interface3303.

There are two primary parts to the Pixel Mask software: an API thatprovides a programming interface to the application and a filter driverthat intercepts calls from the graphics device interface to the displaydriver and provides the pixel mask functionality.

The Pixel Mask API provides a set of functions that allows theapplication program to create and define the Pixel Mask regions, and toidentify the authorized bitmap that can be displayed in the Pixel Maskregion.

The following functions are defined for the Pixel Mask API:

Pixelmask_Init initializes the Pixel Mask software. Resources areallocated and initialized, and the software is put into a known state.

Pixelmask_Uninit de-initializes the Pixel Mask software. Resources arefreed, and the software in put into an undefined state.

Pixelmask_CreateMask creates and defines a pixel mask. *Pixelmask_DeleteMask deletes a previously created pixel mask. *Pixelmask_ActivateMask activates an existing pixel mask. *Pixelmask_DeactivateMask deactivates an existing pixel mask. Oncedeactivated, the display space is no longer reserved.

Pixelmask_IdentifySource identifies the display source (for example, abitmap) that has access to an existing pixel mask. All other attempts todisplay to the display space within the pixel mask will be clipped atthe pixel mask boundaries.

The Pixel Mask Display filter augments the functionality of the displaydriver by allowing the creation of pixel masks and the identification ofauthorized display sources that can be displayed in the pixel masks. Thedisplay filter will clip all other data that is output into the regioncovered by the pixel masks. The display filter intercepts calls from thenative graphics device interface to the display driver. It hooks inprocessing before calling the display driver and additional processingafter the thread of execution returns from the display driver.

For Windows™ 9x systems, the following display driver functions need tohave pre-and post-processing added to support the pixel mask feature.

BitBlt

BitmapBits

DeviceBitmapBits

ExtTextOut

Output

Pixel

SaveScreenBitmap

ScanLr

SetDIBitsToDevice

StretchBlt

StretchDIBits

UpdateColors

Each of these functions will be wrapped by an associated Pixel Masksoftware function that will, for non-authorized sources, check thespecified destination against existing pixel masks, and, if there's anintersection, clip the source data so none is displayed in the regioncovered by the pixel mask. Authorized sources will be passed through tothe display driver function to render data.

One skilled in the art will recognize that, in conjunction with usingother software techniques that enable rendering to the extended displayareas (areas outside of the native desktop display area), the pixel masktechniques can also provide persistent displays outside the desktop.

6. Additional/Alternative Embodiments

6.1 Additional Embodiments of Overscan Techniques for Modifying theDisplay Area to Support a Complementary GUI

The following embodiments may be used to modify the size of the displayarea or the allocation of the display area in order to support acomplementary user interface:

1. Utilizing the VESA BIOS Extensions (VBE) in place of the CRTController registers (FIG. 5) to determine and/or access the linearwindow position address, step 138, as necessary.

2. Utilizing the VESA BIOS Extensions (VBE) in place of the CRTController registers (FIG. 5) to increase the visible display area asdrawn by the CRT.

3. Utilizing API's (application programming interfaces) 62 capable ofdirect driver and/or hardware manipulation, such as Microsoft's DirectXand/or DirectDraw, in place of the CRT Controller registers and/ordirect access to the display buffer.

4. Utilizing API's (applications programming interfaces) 62, such asMicrosoft's DirectX and/or DirectDraw, capable of direct driver and/orhardware manipulation, to create a second virtual display surface on theprimary display with the same purpose, to display a separate andunobscured graphical user interface.

5. Utilizing modifications to the Shell or Shell tray window componentof the operating system 63 in place of the CRT Controller registersand/or DirectX access to the display buffer.

6. Utilizing modifications to the Shell or Shell tray window componentof the operating system 63 to create a second virtual display surface onthe primary display with the same purpose, to display a separate andunobscured graphical user interface.

7. Building this functionality into the actual video drivers 64 and/ormini-drivers. Microsoft Windows provides support for virtual devicedrivers, VxDs, and/or System Services which could also directlyinterface with the hardware and drivers. These could also include an APIto provide applications with an interface to the modified display.

8. Incorporating the same functionality, with or without the VGAregisters, into the BIOS and providing an API to allow applications aninterface to the modified display.

9. Incorporating the same functionality into hardware devices, such asmonitor itself, with hardware and/or software interfaces to the CPU.

10. Incorporating the same functionality into overlay devices, eitherthrough the video device system or not, overlaying the display toprovide applications with an interface to the display.

Embodiments of the present invention do not depend solely upon theability to change the CRTCs to modify the visible display area. Asdescribed, additional mechanisms are provided that define other methodsof creating and accessing visible areas of the screen that are outsidethe dimensions of the desktop accessed by the native operating system'suser interface. Various other embodiments of the methods and systems ofthe present invention also will be apparent to one skilled in the art.

6.2 Using Alternate Display Content Controller to Drive the NativeDesktop

Techniques of the present invention may be used to control the desktope.g., Windows) to easily enable the desktop to operate in virtually anynon-standard size limited only by the capability of the displayhardware. This may be in combination with parallel graphical userinterface displays or exclusively to maximize the primary operatingsystem desktop display area. This may not require any modification tothe operating system.

For example, the visual display area is conventionally defined by thevalues maintained in the CRTC registers on the chip and available to thedriver. The normally displayed area is defined by VGA standards, andsubsequently by SVGA standards, to be a preset number of modes, eachmode including a particular display resolution which specifies the areaof the display in which the desktop can be displayed.

The desktop of a typical native operating system, e.g., Windows, canonly be displayed in this area because the operating system does notdirectly read/write the video memory, rather it uses programminginterface calls to the video driver. The video driver simplyreads/writes using an address that happens to be in video memory. Sothis mechanism needs to recognizethe value (e.g., address) that thevideo card and driver assert is available for painting. This value isqueried from the registers, modified by specific amounts to increase thedisplay area, and rewritten to the card. In this manner, exampleembodiments cab change the attributes of writable and visible displayarea without informing the operating system's display interface of thechange.

Embodiments of the present invention don't necessarily change the CRTCsto add just to the bottom. Preferably the top is also moved up a little.This keeps the displayed interfaces centered within the drivable displayarea. For example, rather than just add thirty-two scan lines to thebottom, the top of the display area is moved up by sixteen lines.

6.3 Additional Embodiments for Locating Parallel User Interfaces

One skilled in the art will recognize that any number of parallel GUIsmay be positioned in areas not normally considered the conventionaloverscan area. For example, a secondary GUI may be positioned in a smallsquare exactly in the center of the normal display in order to provide aservice required by the particular system and application. In fact, thetechniques of reading and rewriting screen display information can beused to maintain the primary GUI information, or portions of it, in anadditional memory and selectively on a timed, computed, interactive, orany other basis, replace a portion of the primary GUI with the secondaryGUI such as a pop-up, window, or any other display space. One skilled inthe art will recognize that the techniques discussed can be used toeffectively position a secondary GUI anywhere on the display screen thatis addressable by the alternate display content controller. Thecontroller can also be used to control the relationship between thenative (primary) GUI and any secondary GUIs in terms of what isdisplayed, in what location, at what time.

As a simple example, a security system may require the ability todisplay information to a user without regard to the status of thecomputer system and/or require the user to make a selection, such ascall for help by clicking on “911?”. Embodiments of the presentinvention could provide a video display buffer in which a portion of theprimary GUI interface was continuously recorded and displayed in asecondary GUI for example in the center of the screen. Undernon-emergency conditions, the secondary GUI would then be effectivelyinvisible in that the user would not notice anything except the primaryGUI.

Under the appropriate emergency conditions, an alarm monitor could causethe secondary GUI to present the “911?” to the user by overwriting thecopy of the primary display stored in the secondary GUI memory.Alternatively, a database of photographs may be stored and one recalledin response to an incoming phone call in which caller ID identified aphone number associated with a database photo entry.

In general, embodiments of the present invention may provide one or moresecondary user interfaces which may be useful whenever it is moreconvenient or desirable to control a portion of the total display,either outside the primary display in an unused area such as an overscanarea or even in a portion of the primary GUI directly or by timedivision multiplexing, directly by communication with the video memory,or by bypassing at least a portion of the video memory to create a newvideo memory. In other words, methods and systems of the presentinvention may provide one or more secondary user interfaces outside ofthe control of the native system, such as the native operating system,which controls the primary GUI.

Additional user interfaces may be used for a variety of differentpurposes. For example, a secondary user interface may be used to providesimultaneous access to the Internet, full motion video, and a conferencechannel. A secondary user interface may be dedicated to a local networkor multiple secondary user interfaces may provide simultaneous accessand data for one or more networks to which a particular computer may beconnected.

6.4 Alternative Embodiment Using a Universal Trapping Technique toCreate and Manipulate a Modified Display

In another aspect of the methods and systems of the present invention, auniversal “trapping” technique is provided for modifying the displayarea and running applications in extended display areas (outside of thenative desktop). The new method is “universal” in the sense that, unlikeseveral of the other techniques, it is not sensitive to the particularvideo card and driver installed in the system. These techniques can beused as an alternative to emulation mode. In essence, the trappingtechnique operates by shrinking the display area (rectangle) allocatedto the native desktop and then dynamically swapping the old size and thenew size in response to certain events in the system.

FIG. 33 is an example screen display of application windows that aredisplayed using a universal trapping approach for modifying the displayarea and rendering outside of the native desktop. The native desktop(with a collection of icons displayed) is shown in display area 3301.Parallel GUIs are shows in display areas 3302-3305, here shown assurrounding the native desktop 3301. One skilled in the art willrecognize that any combination of these parallel GUIs may exist, on oneor more sides of the native desktop, and that several parallel GUIs maycoexist on a side.

An example embodiment of the trapping technology shrinks the desktoprectangle, and then dynamically swaps the old size and the new size inresponse to certain events. For example, whenever the mouse moves, thedesktop rectangle must be temporarily restored to full screen, in orderfor the cursor have full range of motion and move into the areas outsidethe new size (smaller) inner desktop.

In order for the desktop to be resized on the fly, the program mustfirst determine where in memory the desktop rectangle is stored.Experimentation has revealed that Windows™ maintains this information inseveral locations. These locations are undocumented in both 9x and NT.As discussed below, one embodiment determines these locations by hookingparticular function calls to the native windowing system. There arenumerous events that must be intercepted in order to maintain the“illusion” of a smaller desktop. These events are enumerated as follows:

32-bit Ring-3 Hooks:

1. The WNDPROC (window main procedure) of each outside window must behooked. The hook procedure checks for messages related to size andposition of the window (WM_DESTROY, WM_SIZfNG, WM_WINDOPOSCHANGING,WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGED, WM_SYSCOMMAND), in order to maintain properplacement of the window and size of the new desktop.

2. USER32!GetSystemMetrics. This function is hooked to generate fakereturn values for SM_CXSCREEN and SM_CYSCREEN.

3. USER32!ChangeDisplaySettings. This function is hooked because thealternate display content controller needs to know when the screen modeis changing.

32-bit Ring-0 Hooks:

4. Context Switches. When context is switched to an outside window (awindow outside of the native desktop area), the desktop rectangle isexpanded to full screen; when switched to an inside window, the desktoprectangle is set back to its small size.

5. SET_DEVICE_FOCUS. This is a VMM control message that is broadcastfrom the Virtual Display Driver (VDD) whenever the screen is going toDOS full-screen mode or back. We turn on or off trapping in this case.For NT, a different detection method is needed.

16-bit Ring-3 Hooks:

6. USER!Mouse_Event. All mouse events, including mouse moves, comethrough this function call. The alternate display content controllerneeds to intercept mouse moves before they are processed by the system.If the mouse is outside the desktop, the desktop rectangle must betemporarily expanded to include the full screen. After the systemfinishes processing the mouse event, the desktop rectangle is restoredto the size it was before the mouse event occurred. p2 7. GDI!Escape.The hook for this function checks for the GDI Escape code 39, which isMOUSETRAILS. Presumably this code is sent on each mode change. The mainreason for this hook is to react to the screen mode changes not causedby the ChangeDisplaySettings[Ex] (e.g. Direct Draw).

9. USER!CopyRect and USER!UnionRect. In addition, the two APIsUSER!CopyRect and USER!UnionRect (both 16-bit) are hooked duringinitialization just prior to calling ChangeDisplaySettings. No settingsare actually changed, but as a byproduct, the system calls these twoAPIs with the desktop rectangle as a parameter. This is how theaddresses of where the desktop rectangle are stored are collected. Oneskilled in the art will recognize that other methods, however, arepossible, and for NT, necessary.

FIG. 34 is an example block diagram of components of an exampleembodiment of the trapping technique for modifying the display area.This embodiment consists of four components: a 16-bit DLL (TRAP16.DLL)3401, a 32-bit DLL (TRAP32.DLL) 3402, a 32-bit EXE (TRAP.EXE) 3403, anda V×D (TRAP.VXD) 3404. These modules communicate with each other in arather complicated way, as shown in FIG. 34.TRAP32.DLL is where most ofthe action takes place. It is a hybrid of ring-three and ring-zero code.TRAP16.DLL is used for trapping APIs in the 16-bit USER and GDI modules.The V×D is simply a “helper” that brokers kernel-mode calls forTRAP32.DLL. TRAP.EXE is the shell that loads the other modules andcreates windows around the edge of the desktop.

The trapping architecture supports multiple APIs, each residing in aseparate DLL. FIG. 35 is an example block diagram of the trappingarchitecture supporting multiple APIs for different windowingenvironments. The trapping architecture shown in FIG. 35 supports aPixelBar API 3503, a Win32-Specific API 3504, and an Other API 3505. ThePixelBar API 3503 supports a current implementation of the extendeddisplay area support and allows applications, such as xSides, discussedin the Example Complementary User Interfaces section, to run withoutmodification.

A drawback of using the PixelBar API atop the current embodiment of thetrapping architecture is that the PixelBar API was designed to beplatform independent, with no knowledge of windows; space createdoutside the native desktop by the trapping technique on the other hand,is actually a window. So the application passes raw bitmaps down to thePixelBar API, and the trapping support then turns around and copies themto a window. In effect, every pixel is processed twice.

A WIN32-specific API 3504, eliminates the double buffering. A trappingtechnique-aware application registers itself with the trappingarchitecture, and then requests that it be run outside the nativedesktop. This way, the application is running “natively,” with windowdimensions that extend into the outside rectangle, and can write pixelsdirectly to its own window without going through an extra API.

Other APIs 3505 include techniques for other applications, such asADA-viewers, to communicate with the trapping architecture.

As discussed above, particular function calls in the native windowingsystem are hooked to determine the location of the desktop rectangle andin order to maintain the “illusion” of a smaller desktop. FIG. 36 is anexample block diagram of the trapping architecture communication usingkernel mode hooks.

The hooking mechanism works as follows. The first step is to find thelinear address of the interception point. The way this is found dependson what is being hooked.

For 16-bit DLLs, an appy time event is scheduled. When the event istriggered, _SHELL_LoadLibrary and_SHELL_GetProcAddress areexecuted,returning a 16:16 address which can then be converted to alinear address via_SelectorMapFlat.

For 32-bit DLLs, the client calls GetProcAddress from Ring 3 and passesthe address down to kernel-mode, or, alternatively, called from Ring 3via an asynchronous procedure call.

Once the linear address is determined, an INT3 instruction is insertedat that address. This is a one-byte software interrupt (opcode CC). Thelinear address is also saved in an internal table, along with the bytecovered up by the INT3 instruction.

Whenever the INT3 is hit, the V×D gets control (because it was hooked atinit time with Hook_PM_Fault). The current EIP is checked against atable of breakpoints; if it's not found, the INT3 is assumed to havebeen placed by another process, and the old INT3 handler is called.

If it is the trapping_system INT3, the hook procedure is called, thenthe byte replaced by the INT3 is temporarily restored, and execution isresumed at the point of the INT3, and single-step mode is turned on.This will execute one instruction and then trigger an INT1. The INT1handler will then restore the INT3, turn off single-step mode, andresume execution.

The main service provided by the kernel-mode component is theinterception of the various API entry points, Windows messages, and, inthe case of Windows 9x, VMM Control messages.

These kernel-mode services are provided through IOCTLs issued fromuser-mode programs via the DeviceloControl function, as described in theblock diagram in FIG. 36. This is the standard way for 32-bit user-modeprograms to communicate with kernel-mode code, and thus provides someconsistency between Windows 9x and NT implementations.

6.5 Alternative Embodiments in Unix Environments to Create andManipulate a Modified Display

Windowing environments other than Windows™ utilize other architecturesfor creating windows and rendering to them. In Unix type environments,several window systems are used, including those modeled after anarchitecture known as X-Windows, developed by the MassachusettsInstitute of Technology (for example, the MIT developed X11 Server).These environments use an API to create windows and resources for themthat are based upon a hierarchy of windows. The desktop background istypically mapped to the root (parent) window, and all other applicationsthat wish to participate as a joint collection are mapped to windowsthat are children of this root window. This way, the window system knowshow to distribute events to the applications that own particularwindows.

In an X-Windows type environment, the methods and systems of the presentinvention provide a mechanism for dividing windows between the desktopand between the parallel user interfaces of the complementary GUI.Techniques are provided to split the adapter resources for display ofinformation and to create one or more windowing spaces outside of thenormal desktop display.

To accomplish this, the alternate display content controller traps theadapter codes and modifies the drawable screen space used by X-Windows.The alternate display content controller then creates its own spacesusing a windowing system specifically engineered to display data in theextended display designated spaces.

In one embodiment, the X11 Server code is modified to allow for N numberof “Root” Windows to be presented. This is achieved by modifying theX-Server and changing the drawable area for the “User Root” window, andcreating a second “xSides root” window. The alternate display contentcontroller (acting as the X11 server) then traps client requests, andevents, and directs information to the correct window based on clientattributes. For example, an xSides client's requests have specificcharacteristics that are designed for the xSides space.

In another embodiment, the alternate display content controller createsN number of displays, each controlled by its own X11 display server.First, a master controller switch is created, which is responsible forthe full screen management. Then, the display is divided by the numberof servers needed, depending upon how many separate extended displayspaces are being used. Note that preferably only one of the servers isaccessible by the standard X-Client communication. All other instancesare alternate display content controller-specific X11 Servers whichaccept content from client code that has been enabled to use thealternate display content controller API.

A means to implement the multiple-Root window mechanism described aboveis illustrated in Table 4.

TABLE 4 EXAMPLE CODE Int FindRoot(x, y) { int i: for (i = 2; i > 0; i−−)if (( x >= WindowTable[i]->drawable.x) && (x <WindowTable[i]->drawable.x + WindowTable[i]->drawable.width) && (y >=WindowTable[i]->drawable.y) && (y < WindowTable[i]->drawable.y +WindowTable[i]->drawable.height))  return i: return −1: }xEvent*FixEvents(count. xEvents) int count: xEvent *xEvents; { int i;int wNum; for (i = 0; i < count; i++) { if ((xEvents[i].u.u.type ==KeyPress) ∥  (xEvents[i].u.u.type == KeyRelease) ∥  (xEvents[i].u.u.type== ButtonPress) ∥  (xEvents[i].u.u.type == ButtonRelease) ∥ (xEvents[i].u.u.type == MotionNotify)) { wNum =FindRoot(xEvents[i].u.keyButtonPointer.rootX.xEvents[i].u.keyButtonPointer.rootY); xEvents[i].u.keyButtonPointer.root = WindowTable[wNum]->  drawable.id; xEvents[i].u.keyButtonPointer.rootX = WindowTable[wNum]->  drawable.x; xEvents[i].u.keyButtonPointer.rootY = WindowTable[wNum]->  drawable.y;} else if ((xEvents[i].u.u.type == EnterNotify) ∥ (xEvents[i].u.u.type== LeaveNotify)) {  wNum = FindRoot(xEvents[i].u.keyButtonPointer.rootX.xEvents[i].u.keyButtonPointer.rootY): xEvents[i].u.keyButtonPointer.root = WindowTable[wNum]-> drawable.id; xEvents[i].u.keyButtonPointer.rootX = WindowTable[wNum]->  drawable.x: xEvents[i].u.keyButtonPointer.rootY = WindowTable[wNum]->  drawable.y:} } return xEvents: }

7. Initiating the Alternate Display Content Controller

In another embodiment of the present invention, the launching orinitiating of the program may be modified and controlled. For example,alternate display content controller 6 may be launched as a service, asan application, or as a user application. As a service, alternatedisplay content controller 6 may be launched as a service within theregistry of utility operating system 5B. The first kind of applicationis launched in the Run section in the registry, and the user applicationmay be initiated from the Start Up Group within the Start button. Thus,alternate display content controller 6 may be initiated any time fromthe first thing after graphics mode is enabled to the very last thinginitiated.

Launched as a service, alternate display content controller 6 may bevisible shortly after utility operating system 5B such as Windowsactually addresses the display, and how soon after depends on wherealternate display content controller 6 is put it in the order of thethings that will be launched as services. It may be possible to putalternate display content controller 6 so that it launches asessentially the first service and thus would launch almost at the sametime as the drivers, very, very shortly after the drivers are launched.Accordingly, it is possible to have the screen change from text mode tographics, draw the colored background, immediately re-display with theoverscan addressed and a parallel GUI such as CSNB 2 display the veryclose to the same time as taskbar. Launched as a run-line application,alternate display content controller 6 may be visible in display space 1shortly after icons appear.

8. Example Complementary User Interface Support

The following descriptions provide some example user interfacefunctionality that can be implemented using methods and techniques ofthe present invention. The xSides™ application environment (hereinafter“xSides™”) implemented by xSides Corporation provides a complementaryuser interface, which can coexist using the techniques of the presentinvention with a native desktop such as Windows 95. It includes, amongother capabilities, a cylindrical visualization of a secondary userinterface, a Portal feature, and a Web Jump (Network Browser) featurethat offers Internet browsing and searching capabilities. The Portalfeature can include any type of textual or graphical content envisionedby its implementer.

xSides™ also includes the ability to create and execute these interfacesthrough an application programming interface (API) component.

The xSides™ API supports the creation and maintenance of a secondaryGUI, such as the example cylindrical user interface discussed below withreference to FIGS. 19-21.

One skilled in the art will recognize that many other user interfacescan be realized by the methods, systems, and techniques of the presentinvention and that these interfaces may be available in conjunction withone another.

8.1 xSides™ Application Environment Overview

The xSides™ environment is an embodiment of the methods and systems ofthe present invention. It supports a user interface that is alwaysvisible and accessible, technically scalable, able to “overtake” thedesktop, merge-able, able to provide highly secure data transmissions,easy to use, and small (<1.5 MB to download).

xSides™ is implemented by software (for example, the alternate displaycontent controller discussed above), that is independent of anyunderlying systems' user interface. It resides “below” the operatingsystem and “above” the drivers (if the system architecture is viewedfrom the drivers up through the application software). The xSides™software communicates directly to the driver level and adjusts videodisplay parameters. It also allows keyboard and mouse events outside ofthe primary user interface supported by the native operating system asdescribed in the earlier sections.

The technology can deliver, among other things, Internet content andservices, third-party applications, Web browsers, personal Internetportals, advertisements, Web-based client-server applications, includingaudio and video conferencing, and electronic program guides (EPGs). Inaddition, in conjunction with the use of underlying streamingtechnologies on the Internet and technologies that support alternatecommunication media such as broadband cable networks, televisionprotocols, etc., the xSidesTM technology is able to support Web-basedapplications on settop boxes and, on the other hand, specific deviceapplications, such as telephones and video and audio conferencing on ageneric media such as computer display screen using the Internet.Because the xSides™ Technology enables content and functionality toreside physically outside and be controlled independent of the existingoperating systems, such content and functionality do not interfere withand cannot be covered by the operating system or the applications thatreside on the desktop. In this manner, the xSidesTM technology is ableto support a “Web-top” interface as opposed to a simple desktopinterface. In addition, because the xSides™ technology can bedistributed with a microkernel, cross-platform solutions can be offeredwithout the need to load multiple operating systems on a single computersystem. For example, xSides™ can support applications such as WebMail,instant messaging, e-faxing, telephony, music players.

The xSides™ Technology is able to support interactive content andapplications in a persistent fashion outside of the operating systembecause it resides outside of the operating system's control. BecausexSides™ resides within an abstraction layer “below” the operating systemand “above” the device drivers, xSides™ can adjust the parameters forthe video display system, can increase the number of pixels and scanlines, and can enable keyboard and mouse events within the overscanarea. This allows xSides™ to dramatically resize the existing desktop,if desired, “uncovering” the majority of the display area around any orall four sides of the desktop, which can then be used to displaycomplementary content and applications. An application programminginterface (“API”) to the xSides™ Technology, for example the API ofAppendix F allows developers to rapidly develop applications that takeadvantage of these unique characteristics of the technology. Thetechnology can potentially address every user of an Internet-enabledcomputer or TV worldwide. In addition, the proliferation of consumerelectronics operating systems (i.e., Microsoft CE) in such devices asportable daily planners and set-top boxes further expands the marketopportunity for this technology.

Example products that have used xSides™ Technology are variations ofco-branded mini-portals, which reside on the user's display area andfeature the content and applications of partner vendors. These productsinitially appear on the bottom of a computer screen as a thin cylindericon (the “control bar”) containing a series of control buttons. Thecontrol bar is comprised of a number of faces, which are called“Sides™,” each of which can contain different combinations of content,applications and graphics (hence the name xSides™). The user can easilyrotate from one Side™ to the next with mouse clicks to view and accessthe different content present on a given Side™. The ability to rotatethe xSides™ interface to different faces expands the available computerdisplay real estate and allows for compatibility among products licensedto different partners, enabling users to easily view and access whatevercontent they want. The control buttons can perform a variety of tasks,including launching a Web connection or application, displaying tickersand banners of server-delivered content, or can allow the user to launchfunctions running in an additional xSides™ display area called thexSides™ Portal.

The xSides™ Portal is an Internet display area which can contain anyimage or application, including email and instant messaging input andoutput, calendar and address book information, ISP controls, ad-banners,electronic programming guides and Web-based client-server applications.The Portal may be independent of and co-exist with (above, below, orbeside) the xSides™ control bar. In one embodiment, the images andapplications are html-based; however, one skilled in the art willrecognize that the Portal support can be programmed to displaydata/content in any programming language or format, such as Java-basedcontent or XML. In each case the Portal support is modified to interpretthe content source language of choice. Furthermore, the content sourcefor the portal can come from a remote network such as the Internet, anintranet, or from local device storage, such as a hard disk. The xSides™Portal may be used, for example, to build personal “desktop” Internetportals. Although in one embodiment preferably only one Portal isdisplayed in conjunction with an xSides™ control bar (there may bemultiple bars on the screen), multiple Portals can be associated with asingle side, provided each Portal is accessible through a user interfacecomponent such as a button or menu.

8.2 xSides™ Architecture

In a preferred embodiment, the xSides™ technology is implemented by adistributed architecture comprised of client and server computersystems.

In one embodiment, the content (the sides) for user control bars isstored on one or more xSides™ servers and users communicate to theseservers via network connections. FIG. 31 contains an example blockdiagram of an implementation of the xSides™ architecture. Servercomputer system 3101 is connected to client computer system 3102 througha set of communication and configuration mechanisms, 3103 and 3104,respectively, which interface to a client side application 3105responsible for the display of the xSides™ control bar. (Although notshown in FIG. 31, one skilled in the art will recognize that thecommunication and configuration mechanisms 3103 and 3104 haveserver-side counterparts, which are components of the server 3106.) Oneskilled in the art will appreciate that the server computer system 3101and the client computer system 3102 may in implementation reside in amultiple of distributed or non-distributed layouts, including that anxSides™ server may be distributed over several systems or may reside onthe same machine as the client components. One skilled in the art willalso appreciate that other configurations and components are possibleand may be used to implement the technology described herein.

Referring to FIG. 31, the user downloads the partner's content initiallyfrom a server machine upon installation of xSides™ on the user's clientmachine. The content is initially stored within a database or filesystem, such as database 3107 or file system 3108. Once the xSides™server machine 3106 sends the content to the xSides™ application 3105,through the communications layer 3103, the client computer system 3102can store a local copy of the user's control bar and configurationinformation on local database/file system 3109.

The communications layer 3103 functions to streamline the communicationsbetween the client computer system 3102 and the server computer system3101 and supports the modularized updates of client-side information.Communication is performed preferably using encrypted markup (e.g.,SGML) files, which are sent across the network connection using standardHTTP packet processing. The communications layer 3103 streamlinesrequests by combining the requests from the various dynamic linklibraries (“DLLs”) that handle client-side functions into a singlerequest packet that is sent to an xSides™ server. For example, the sidesmanagement functionality that enables users to add and remove sides andthe various statistical functions are preferably handled using separateDLLs. When these DLLs need to issue requests, they send them to thecommunications layer 3103, which combines the requests by placing tagsthat corresponds to each request in a single packet that is forwarded tothe server. The server then deconstructs each packet to process theactual requests. Streamlining the communication in this manner minimizesnetwork traffic and delays.

In addition, the communications layer (client and server portions)enables the ability schedule server communication (ping the server forinformation) and to schedule the completion of server side tasks onbehalf of dependent components on the client side. For example, theStats/Logging mechanism described below may schedule the updates ofserver-side logging information on a periodic basis. Also, thecomponents of the client-side xSides™ process, such as the DLLspreviously mentioned, can be downloaded at the start of each xSides™session. Moreover, they can be “hot swapped” to download updated systemcomponents in the background. This enables xSides™ to dynamicallyconfigure and update itself transparent to the user. One skilled in theart will recognize that the frequency of updates and polling the serverfor information can be set in any manner—e.g., randomly or explicitly orimplicitly by the user or by the application (client-or server-side). Inaddition, the source and destination for pings and downloads isconfigurable—thus allowing the configuration of the server-sidecomponents to be dynamically configured as well.

8.2.1 User Configuration

Each xSides™ user is identifiable by a unique global identifier (a“GUID”). GUIDs are used for multiple purposes, including identifying therequest and response packets communicated by the communications layer.In addition, since each GUID uniquely identifies each user, an xSides™configuration profile can be associated with each user, such that eachuser can use xSides™ according to the users' preferred configuration,regardless of the physical location of the user and regardless of themachine used by the user to run xSides™. Thus, a user can initiate anxSides™ session from a remote location (such as the users' homecomputer) and see the same sides (applications) the user sees from theusers' normal machine (for example, the users' machine at work). Changesthat are made by the user on any machine under the user's GUID areautomatically synchronized on the server system, even if multipleinstances of xSides™' sessions under the same GUID are runningsimultaneously.

To provide this functionality, xSides™ provides a User Registrationclient/server application, preferably implemented as an extractablecomponent such as a DLL, which gathers information from the user andstores it on a server-side file storage mechanism (such as a database).When the user initiates an xSides™ session, the user performs a login,and the user's configuration profile is downloaded (and cached) on theclient system. Based upon the configuration profile, xSides™ determineswhat sides need to be downloaded and cached on the client system, tomake the control bar look like what the user would expect. Thisoperation is performed transparently to the user and provides the user'sexpected environment even if the machine which initiated the request hasa version of xSides™ that was installed from a different partner. Inbrief, the caching mechanisms and general component replacementmechanisms work in conjunction with the merge functionality to providethis configurability.

8.2.2 Merge Function (AllSides)

An important feature of the xSides™ Technology is the ability to “merge”content from multiple partners. Merging is a process in which contentfrom one control bar is merged into another bar. Merge allows users toupgrade their existing xSides™ products to subsequent versions and toadd or remove sides (or faces) to a user's control bar at will.Preferably, when a merge takes place, the original distributor's logoand unique content retains its place on the user's bar, and one or morenew sides of information are added.

Essentially, merge enables users to make their xSides™ product aconvenient, one-stop destination for all of their favorite content andservices. This is not only important and attractive to users, but alsoto strategic partners who are able to introduce multiple faces, as wellas upgrade their users to new applications and functionality over time.Although merge provides product convenience and flexibility for bothusers and strategic partners, in one preferred embodiment neither theoriginal faces nor the persistent logos on an xSides™ product can be“de-merged,” giving strategic partners additional incentive todistribute the products.

The xSides™ technology also enables users to automatically have thesides of their control bars updated as newer versions become available,for example through the use of a website, e.g., AllSides.com, and a userregistration/configuration mechanism. Once a user has installed a side,xSides™ will automatically update the side's content on a periodic basis(for example, by polling a server machine to determine whether newcontent is available and downloading the side definition files when itis). Automatic updates are also preferably performed when a partnerchanges a side and notifies the server machine. As part of theseupdates, dependent files—such as new component DLLs-an be downloaded tothe client machine using the “hot swapping” mechanism described above.In addition, when a user has registered using the User Configurationapplication and the user logins to xSides™, xSides™ uses mergetechnology to create the control bar according to the usersconfiguration profile. This feature is particularly useful when a usertravels between different computer systems. Once merged or downloaded,the sides are cached on the client system for efficient access. They canbe cached indefinitely or for a period of use or under anotherexpiration-based scheme. In addition, any changes to the user'sconfiguration profile are posted to the server system.

8.2.3 xSides™ Filtering

In addition to configuration profiles for each user and the ability toadd/delete sides dynamically, sides can be filtered by vendor(partner/supplier) and by user class. This capability is useful, forexample, for the xSides™ server to determine what to display in a user'sinitial configuration, what a particular user can modify, and fortracking information for a partner. Assuming that the sides for thepartners' control bars are stored in a database (other implementationsare possible), the database can also maintain stored procedures thatcorrelate a particular user class with the sides available to that user.A vendor in this instance is associated with a list of user classes,each of which are associated with a list of user GUIDs and a list ofsides. One skilled in the art will recognize that other organizationsfor classifying such information are possible and that data structuresother than lists or stored procedures may be utilized.

8.2.4 Statistics and Longing Facility

Preferably, a statistics facility is implemented as a DLL component ofthe xSides™ application on the client computer system. The purpose ofthe statistics facility is to gather and record activity and send it tothe server computer system to be logged. Once logged, the loggingfacility uses the data to construct accounting reports and to performother accounting functions.

The statistics facility records user activity in terms of “clicks” and“impressions.” A click is a mouse click on an xSides™ side or portal; animpression is the amount of time a given area of the xSides™ software isdisplayed to a user. Thus, if side MyExampleSide is shown to a user, theimpression is the time this side is displayed, a click occurs when theuser presses a mouse button on a portion of side MyExampleSide. ThexSides™ application informs the statistics facility each time a side isdisplayed (what activity to record) and when a mouse click is trapped(when the activity should be recorded). The statistics DLL prepares amarkup string that encodes the recorded data and sends the data on aperiodic basis to the server system to be logged. (In one embodimentanother DLL is responsible for retrieving the data from the statisticsDLL on a periodic basis, e.g., each minute, and for sending the data tothe server system.) The markup strings include user and vendorinformation, thus user activity can be tracked by vendor as well. Thelogger facility parses the markup strings and enters appropriate datainto the database.

In general, the impression time for a side begins when it is firstdisplayed to the user and ends when it is replaced by another display.However, it is possible for the user leave xSides™ running and not beperforming any function with it. The statistics facility detects betweenimpressions and mere idle time using a timeout heuristic. Specifically,each impression duration is compared to a timeout value and when itexceeds this timeout value, the impression time is cut off. One skilledin the art will appreciate that other techniques may be used to limitimpression duration and to set a minimum for impression duration.

8.2.5 Instant Alert Mechanism

xSides™ also provides a means for partners to send priority messages totheir users via a mechanism known as Instant Alerts. The Instant Alertfacility is preferably a DLL component and thus communicates with anxSides™ server via the communications layer described above. It can alsobe automatically updated. The Instant Alert facility allows a partner tosend a message to a particular user or to broadcast it to a group (aclass) of users. The message content is preferably HTML and is displayedin a browser window on the user's client machine. Each message is markupbased with tags that identify the partner, the user GUID etc, and thuseach message can be processed using xSides™ communication layer packettransport mechanism. Also, because the messages are markup based andthus contain embedded identifying information, appropriateacknowledgments can be sent back to the server when the message isdisplayed or received.

If a message is used repeatedly, a partner may use a template typemessage, which includes the ability to name attributes that are filledin when the message is sent. These named attributes function like macrosin that there value is computed at the time the message is sent. Thisvalue can be the user's GUID, thus providing a unique identifyingmechanism for each user. The Instant Alert facility provides tools forcreating and managing such template messages. The tool can be form-basedor can provide an API for message management.

8.3 Audio and Video Support in the xSides™ Environment

In one embodiment, the xSides™ API provides support for interfacing toother technologies that enable the transmission of audio and video dataover broadband cable networks and over the Internet. Support of thesetechnologies allows xSides™ to support applications without having toload an alternate operating system, or multiple operating systems. Forexample, the API can be used to support two way audio and videoapplications such as a telephone, a video conferencing application, andother applications that use audio and video streaming technologies, suchas those provided by Real Networks Inc. and Broadcom Inc. Also, xSides™can integrate with the technologies and protocols for the transmissionof voice over the Internet and broadband networks (e.g., VoIP, VoDSL,and VoATM). In all these cases, xSides™ presents an API to applications,which hides the underlying technology from applications developers, andallow the developers to present applications in persistent areas on adisplay screen. These API are compatible with any of the techniques usedto modify the display screen and thus can, present these persistentapplications anywhere on the screen, including outside the desktop inphysical overscan space, for example in Portals, in windows on thedesktop, or in any combination of the above. Appendix H, hereinincorporated by reference in its entirety, shows several example suchparallel user interfaces being displayed in conjunction with a nativedesktop.

In addition, when xSides™ is implemented with a microkernel and ispackaged along with the application, the applications can be directlyexecuted on the microkernel and thus execute more efficiently. Oneskilled in the art will understand that such packaging will enableembedding 2-way communication devices using xSides™ directly in devicesthat are function specific as opposed to a general purpose computer. Inaddition, one skilled in the art will recognize that the clientapplications can run on xSides™ implemented as a microkernel or hostedas services on top of a host OS transparently to the application.

In general, the audio and video streaming technologies over the Internetenable two way voice communication to work as follows: The analog data(such as the voice signals from a telephone or other analog device) areconverted from analog to digital and then sent from a source digitaldevice (such as a source computer system) as digital packets over thenetwork medium (Internet or broadband network). These packets withdigital voice data are then reassembled at the destination (such as thereceiving computer system), converted from digital to analog data, andsent out directly through a digital device (such as a connectedtelephone). These technologies typically support an API, which hides allof the A/D and D/A conversion and assembling and disassembing ofpackets.

The xSides™ API marries these technogies to the desktop, by providing anAPI to the lower level technology APIs to offer application developers ameans for providing voice and audio-enabled applications in the xSides™space. In some cases the API maps one to one with the lower level calls,and in others, it maps one xSides™ API call to several underlyingtechnology calls. In either case, the underlying technical details aretransparently provided to the application developer.

8.4 xSides™ Example Cylindrical User Interface

Referring now to FIG. 19, display area 26 includes a parallel GUI 28according to embodiments of the present invention. Display area 26 maybe located anywhere on screen 24S of video monitor 24. For example, withlong axis L oriented horizontally display area 26 may be locatedadjacent edge 24T or edge 24B. Alternatively, with long axis L orientedvertically, display area 26 may be located adjacent edge 24L or edge24R.

Aspect ratio 34 of parallel GUI 28 is the relationship between dimension32 measured along long axis L and dimension 30 expressed as 34:1 whereaspect ratio 34 is determined by equation 36.

36→Aspect ratio 34=dimension 32÷dimension 30

According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention, parallelGUI 28 includes bar 38 surrounded by area 28A. Bar 38 may include one ormore containers or cartridges such as cartridge 86 of FIG. 20. Area 28Amay be any color; in the example embodiment, area 28A is black. Bar 38may be composed of separate elements such as title area 40, one or morehelp areas such as help area 42 and or help area 56, one or morerotators such as rotator 44 and or rotator 48, and one or more buttonssuch as button 46, button 50, ticker 52 and button 54. A button may bedepressible such as button 46 or non-depressible such as button 40. Adepressible button such as button 46 may perform an associated actionand display highlighting when selected and clicked on using anyconventional pointing device such as mouse 22. A non-depressible buttonsuch as button 40 may act as a label and or initiate apparent rotationof the elements of bar 38 to the right of button 40 along with all theassociated sound, apparent motion, and highlighting as described below.

During a ‘mouse over’ condition, that is when a pointer such as arrow 64is moved over a depressible button such as button 46, the appearance ofbutton frame 62 may be changed such as by changing its color and thusthe apparent intensity of emitted light. The change evoked in a buttonframe such as button frame 62 may be localized to a portion of thebutton frame such as comer 62A. Preferably, a ‘mouse over’ conditioncauses light to apparently emit from the lower left corner of the buttonframe such as corner 62B.

Clicking on or ‘mouse down’ condition of a depressible button such asbutton 46 may evoke apparent movement of the button and or apparentlighting changes adjacent the effected button. Preferably, ‘mouse down’of a depressible button such as button 46 causes button 46 to apparentlymove into bar 38 and an apparent increase of light from behind buttonframe 62. Apparent motion and light emission changes may be accomplishedby any conventional means.

Following a click on or ‘mouse down’ condition of a depressible buttonsuch as button 46 a ‘mouse up’ condition is initiated thus completing abutton selection cycle. A ‘mouse up’ condition may initiate an actionsuch a hyperlink or launch an application associated with the actingbutton such as button 46. Additionally, a ‘mouse up’ condition may causea button such as button 46 to reverse the apparent motion caused by theprior ‘mouse down’ condition, thus as in the prior example, button 46apparently springs back out of bar 38 into alignment with bar 38. At theconclusion of a button selection cycle, a highlighting change of aselected button may also be included. In one embodiment, a postselection highlighting is the same as the earlier described ‘mouse over’highlighting and is maintained until another button such as button 54 isselected or some other action within parallel GUI 28 is initiated.

Actuation of a complete button selection cycle on a non-depressiblebutton such as button 50, a title button such as title area 40, or on arotator such as rotator 44 may initiate rotation about long axis L ofthe display area. In one embodiment a click of right mouse button 22Rinitiates rotation of 38 in a first direction D and a click of leftmouse button 22L initiates rotation of 38 in a second direction U,opposite first direction D.

Accompanying a complete button selection cycle as described above, soundmay be used to enhance the experience and thus heighten the similarityof a virtual metaphor to a real 3-dimensional device. In one embodiment,sound 66 may issue from the computer system; sound 66 may resemble asound or sounds issued from a real device such as a subtle mechanicalclick. Any other appropriate sound or sounds may also be used.

A non-depressible button such as button 50 may be used a title button ora placeholder, and thus may not invoke a utility, URL or any otherfunction if subjected to a complete button selection cycle. Accordingly,no highlighting or other special indicia would accompany a ‘mouse over’condition of a non-depressible button such as button 50. In an alternateembodiment, a non-depressible button such as button 50 may include thefunctionality of a rotator such as rotator 44 or 48. Thus a completebutton selection cycle on such a non-depressible button would result inthe apparent rotation of non-depressible button 50 and all the elementsof bar 38 to its right such as ticker 52 and button 60.

Tickers such as ticker 52 may be dynamic reading areas within acartridge such as cartridge 86 as shown in FIG. 20. Scrolling updateabletext such as text 53 can be displayed and the text reading area can alsobe dynamically linked to launch an application or URL. A ticker such asticker 52 may be as long as a single button or any combination ofmultiple buttons. The text such as text 53 that is displayed may bescrolling or otherwise made to move through ticker window 52A. In acurrently preferred embodiment of the present invention text entersticker window 52A at right side 52R and scrolls left, to left side 52L.The scrolling text such as text 53 may repeat in a loop at the end ofthe text string. Ticker text such as text 53 may be updated locally orover a network. A ticker such as ticker 52 may activate a hyperlinkthrough a network when ticker 52 is clicked on, or subjected to acomplete button cycle.

Referring now to FIG. 20, an example of a menu tree that may bedisplayed and accessed through parallel GUI 28 is shown. Menu 70includes title bands 72, 74, 76, 78 and 80, which correspond to titlearea 40, button 46, button 50, ticker 52 and button 54 respectively.Rotators 44 and 48 are represented by bands 82 and 84, respectively. Inthis example, title area 40 includes 6 containers or cartridges,cartridges 86, 87, 88, 89, 90 and cartridge 91. Many more cartridges andtitles may be available; the number of cartridges or titles availablemay only be limited by the resources of the computer. Cartridges such ascartridge 90 or cartridge 91 may include accessories such as a webbrowser or media player or any other accessory. Accessories for acartridge such as cartridge 90 may be installed for use with systemsoftware, or they may be components of the software implementing theparallel GUI, or they may be available via a network.

Referring now to FIG. 21, parallel GUI 28 is shown with accessorycartridge 90 visible. Accessory cartridge 90 may include functionspecific actuators such as fast forward or next track for a CD player. Asection of accessory cartridge 90 or any other cartridge selected mayalso be dedicated to a single function such as web browser 92, to permitthe browser to remain visible at all times that parallel GUI software isrunning.

Cartridges such as cartridges 86-91 may be pre-loaded with links andaccessories. Alternatively, the elements or buttons of a cartridge maybe blank for loading by a user through a “merge” capability. Usercartridge(s) may include access to applications, documents, files, ornetwork links such as URLs and or embedded functions. Some embeddedfunctions which may be launched from a cartridge may include a browser,an MP3 player, instant messaging, trading notices for marketplacefunctions, alerts for auction results and or trades, agent checkingregarding price comparison searches. User items such as applications,documents, files, or network links may be added to a user button via anyconventional method such as copy and paste or drag and drop functions ofsystem software or of any web browser. Preferably, user buttons may berenamed or cleared in any conventional manner.

A parallel GUI such as parallel GUI 28 may also include a help function.Help screens or menus may be implemented in any conventional manner. Amap of the contents and organization of bar 38 may be provided in theform of a menu or tree such as menu 70 of FIG. 20. Menu 70 and otherhelp screens may extend from display area 26 in any conventional manner.In one embodiment, in which menu 70 is visible extending away from edge26T thus allowing bar 38 to remain visible, actuation of a completebutton cycle on a title such as title 87C will initiate rotation of bar38 to bring cartridge 87 and title 87C to visibility on bar 38.

In a one embodiment of the present invention, display area 26 includes 4preset actuators 94. Activation of a complete button cycle on anactuator such as actuator 96 will rotate bar 38 to a pre-selectedposition. A user may initially load, change or delete a preset settingassociated with an actuator such as actuator 96.

The software implementing the parallel GUI may also include a screensaver component such as idle component 96. If parallel GUI 28 isnotified that the system software is in idle, rather than blankingdisplay area 26 as in some conventional techniques, parallel GUI 28 mayauto rotate through all possible cartridge displays of menu 70. When thesystem software returns to active mode, bar 38 will automatically returnto the last active position prior to idle.

If parallel GUI 28 is oriented with a title cartridge, such as cartridge86 with title 86A visible on title area 40, a complete button cycle oftitle area 40 as described above may result in apparent rotation of bar38 and thus display an adjacent cartridge such as cartridge 87 orcartridge 85 (not shown). Title area 40 may also include all buttons androtators to the right of title area 40 as well. In an alternateembodiment, a complete button cycle of title area 40 changes the visibletitle such as title 86 and apparently rotates elements of bar 38 to theright of title area 40 such as rotator 44, rotator 48, button 46, button50, ticker 52 and button 54. The result of changing a cartridge and thusthe title visible in title area 40 is that as cartridge 87 is visible,title 87A may be visible as well as a set of it's subordinate titlessuch as titles 87B, 87C, 87D and 87E. Additional cycling of title area40 will result in display of additional cartridges and thus additionaltitles of band 72 such as titles 88A and 89A.

If title 89A is visible in band 72, execution of a complete button cycleon rotator 44 corresponding to band 82 will cause apparent rotation ofbar 38 at button 46 corresponding to band 74 including everything to theright of button 46. Subsequent button cycles of a rotator such asrotator 44 cause titles which appear on button 46 to sequentially cyclethrough titles 89B, 89C, 89D, 89E and 89F with a new title appearingafter each button cycle. In one preferred embodiment, a merge functionmay be included to allow cartridges such as cartridges 86-91 to be addedto an existing parallel GUI such as parallel GUI 28. A cartridge such ascartridge 86 may be added or merged with any existing cartridges in aparallel GUI such as parallel GUI 28 using any conventional techniquesuch as copy and paste or drag and drop. A merged cartridge such ascartridge 86 may be added between any two adjacent cartridges such ascartridges 88 and 89. Similarly, existing cartridges may be reorderedusing a conventional sort function.

New cartridges may be merged or added to an existing parallel GUI fromany conventional media such as magnetic storage media, optical storagemedia, or from network resources such as the Internet, or any local orintranet network. A delete and or a sort function may also be includedto permit a user to organize or personalize a bar such as bar 38 inparallel GUI according to their own wishes consistent with the parallelGUI software.

For example, a user may go to a specific Internet site to peruse theapplications available to be merged into the parallel GUI. One suchapplication is an application providing access to weather informationover the WEB. The user selects the application to be merged, and theparallel GUI automatically determines a set of cartridges provided bythe application. The parallel GUI software then merges the determinedset of cartridges into the current data structure used to store data onthe currently loaded cartridges. One skilled in the art will recognizethat any conventional data structure may be used, including arrays, hashtables, linked lists, and trees. Preferably, a data structure thatallows easy replacement of entire cartridges (such as cartridges storedas branches of a tree) is used. The parallel GUI software may thenupdate any related data structures whose information depends uponknowledge of the current set of available cartridges.

8.5 Network Browser

Referring again to FIG. 1, in an alternate embodiment of the presentinvention, the technique of controlling the allocation of display area 1is used to open a context-sensitive network-browser-2 (CSNB) adjacentbut not interfering with operating system desktop 3 and/or parallelgraphical user interface 4. A display controller such as alternatedisplay content controller 6 may include CSNB 2 thus permitting thebrowser to create and control a space for itself on display 1 which maynot be overwritten by utility operating system 5B. The combinedcontroller/browser may be an application running on the computeroperating system, or may include an operating system kernel of varyingcomplexity ranging from dependent on the utility operating system forhardware system services to a parallel system independent of the utilityoperating system and capable of supporting dedicated applications. Thealternate display content controller/browser may also include contentand operating software such as JAVA delivered over the Internet I or anyother LAN. There may also be more than one context sensitive networkbrowser and more than one parallel graphical user interface in additionto the operating system desktop.

Context sensitive interface such as network browser 2 may respond tomovement and placement of cursor IC controlled by a pointing device suchas mouse 1M anywhere on display area 1. The generation and control of acursor across two or more parallel graphical user interfaces wasdescribed previously. The location of cursor 1C will trigger CSNB 2 toretrieve appropriate and related network pages such as web page 2A. CSNB2 may store the last X number of CSNB enabled network addresses fordisplay offline. In a currently preferred embodiment of the presentinvention, X is ten pages. If a user is examining a saved CSNB enabledpage offline, a mouse click on the page or a link on the page willinitiate the users dial-up sequence and establish an online connection.

In an alternate embodiment, alternate display content controller 6 mayinclude a browser or search engine. In an alternate embodiment of thepresent invention, space 2C may include an edit input box 2D. Edit inputbox 2D may include conventional functionality's such as edit, copy,paste, etc. A user may enter a URL into edit input box 2D using anyconventional input device and then select a button to launch or initiatealternate display content controller 6 as a browser. This may beaccomplished by using objects and or drivers from utility operatingsystem 5B. Initiating alternate display content controller 6 as abrowser would include a simple window to display the URL as a live HTMLdocument with all conventional functionality. By implementing alternatedisplay content controller 6 as a little applet that uses that DLL, itmay slide on, or slide off. Thus initiating alternate display contentcontroller 6 as a browser is like a window into the Internet.

Secondly, a user may enter any text into edit input box 2D using anyconventional input device and then select a button to launch or initiatealternate display content controller 6 as a search engine. By entering asearch string and selecting “search” and enter any string and click on“search” and pass that to any number from one to whatever or existingsearch engines, and subsequently have the search string acted on by oneor more selected search engines and or by alternate display contentcontroller 6 as a search engine. Resulting in multiple different windowsappearing in some sort of stacked or cascaded or tiled format, with thedifferent searches within them.

Using alternate display content controller 6 as a search engine orbrowser, the results or HTML document may be displayed in any overscanarea or on the desktop.

Referring now to FIG. 17, a context sensitive network browser such asCSNB 13 may also include a suite of tools such as tools 14 that may ormay not have fixed locations on the browser space. Such tools mayinclude but are not limited to e-mail, chat, buddy lists and voice. Asshown, spaces such as desktop 14A, web page 14B, secondary GUI 14C andbrowser 13 may be arranged in any convenient manner.

Although specific embodiments of, and examples for, the presentinvention are described herein for illustrative purposes, it is notintended that the invention be limited to these embodiments. Equivalentmethods, structures, processes, steps, and other modifications withinthe spirit of the invention fall within the scope of the invention.Also, those skilled in this art will understand how to make changes andmodifications to the present invention to meet their specificrequirements or conditions. For example, the teachings provided hereinof the present invention can be applied to other types of computersystems, including those that control non-integrated display surfaces.In addition, the teachings may be applied to other types of devices thathave display surfaces and other organizations of computer operatingsystems and environments. These and other changes may be made to theinvention in light of the above detailed description. Accordingly, theinvention is not limited by the disclosure.

What is claimed is:
 1. A method for enabling the display of an image ona video display system in an area outside of a first display areacontrolled by a computer operating system window system, the videodisplay system having a total displayable area of which the firstdisplay area is a part, comprising: modifying the total displayable areaof the video display system to include a second display area by reducingthe size of the first display area that is controlled by the operatingsystem window system, the second display area being controlled bysecondary code that is independent of the operating system windowsystem; allocating a new window to correspond to the second displayarea; upon receiving an event from an input/output device, determiningwhether to route the event to the operating system window system code orto the secondary code; and routing the event to the determined code,such that input can be received from and output can be rendered to thesecond display area, in a manner that is transparent to the computeroperating system.
 2. The method of claim 1 for use in a Unix environmentwherein the total displayable area is mapped to a root window andmodifying the total displayable area comprises altering a drawable areafor the root window.
 3. The method of claim 2 wherein the new window isa child window of the root window.
 4. The method of claim 1 for use in aUnix environment wherein an adapter resource for the display ofinformation is initially allocated to a window associated with the totaldisplayable area and the adapter resource is split to provide adapterresources for the new window.
 5. The method of claim 4 wherein theadapter resource comprises an alternate display content controllertrapping adapter codes to modify the total displayable space and tocreate the second display area.
 6. The method of claim 1 for use in aUnix environment wherein the total displayable area is mapped to a rootwindow and modifying the total displayable area comprises generating aplurality of root windows.
 7. The method of claim 6 wherein a controllerassociated with the new window routes the received event to the firstand second display areas based on an attribute associated with thereceived event.
 8. The method of claim 1 for use in a Unix environmentwherein the total displayable area is mapped to a root window andcontrolled by a master display server, and modifying the totaldisplayable area comprises generating the second display area controlledby its own display server.
 9. The method of claim 8 wherein the masterdisplay server is the only display server accessible by the computeroperating system.
 10. A computer readable media containing computerinstructions that cause a computer processor to enable the display of animage on a video display system in an area outside of a first displayarea controlled by a computer operating system window system, the videodisplay system having a total displayable area of which the firstdisplay area is a part, the computer readable media comprisingcontaining computer instructions that cause the computer processor to:modify the total displayable area of the video display system to includea second display area by reducing the size of the first display areathat is controlled by the operating system window system, the seconddisplay area being controlled by secondary code that is independent ofthe operating system window system; allocate a new window to correspondto the second display area; upon receiving an event from an input/outputdevice, determine whether to route the event to the operating systemwindow system code or to the secondary code; and route the event to thedetermined code, such that input can be received from and output can berendered to the second display area, in a manner that is transparent tothe computer operating system.
 11. The computer readable media of claim10 for use in a Unix environment wherein the total displayable area ismapped to a root window and computer instructions to modify the totaldisplayable area comprises computer instructions to alter a drawablearea for the root window.
 12. The computer readable media of claim 11wherein the new window is a child window of the root window.
 13. Thecomputer readable media of claim 10 for use in a Unix environmentwherein the computer instructions cause an alternate display contentcontroller to trap adapter codes to modify the total displayable spaceand to create the second display area.
 14. The computer readable mediaof claim 10 for use in a Unix environment wherein the total displayablearea is mapped to a root window and the computer instructions to modifythe total displayable area comprises computer instructions to generate aplurality of root windows.
 15. The computer readable media of claim 14wherein the computer instructions cause a controller associated with thenew window to route the received event to the first and second displayareas based on an attribute associated with the received event.
 16. Thecomputer readable media of claim 10 for use in a Unix environmentwherein the total displayable area is mapped to a root window andcontrolled by a master display server, and the computer instructions tomodify the total displayable area comprises computer instructions togenerate the second display area controlled by its own display server.17. A system to enable the display of an image on a video display systemin an area outside of a first display area controlled by a computeroperating system window system, the video display system having a totaldisplayable area of which the first display area is a part, the systemcomprising: a processor to modify the total displayable area of thevideo display system to include a second display area by reducing thesize of the first display area that is controlled by the operatingsystem window system, the second display area being controlled bysecondary code that is independent of the operating system windowsystem; and a display adapter to: allocate a new window to correspond tothe second display area; upon receiving an event from an input/outputdevice, determine whether to route the event to the operating systemwindow system code or to the secondary code; and route the event to thedetermined code, such that input can be received from and output can berendered to the second display area, in a manner that is transparent tothe computer operating system.
 18. The system of claim 17 for use in aUnix environment wherein the total displayable area is mapped to a rootwindow and the processor modifies the total displayable area to alter adrawable area for the root window.
 19. The system of claim 18 whereinthe new window is a child window of the root window.
 20. The system ofclaim 17 for use in a Unix environment wherein the display adapter trapsadapter codes to modify the total displayable space and to create thesecond display area.
 21. The system of claim 17 for use in a Unixenvironment wherein the total displayable area is mapped to a rootwindow and the display adapter modifies the total displayable area togenerate a plurality of root windows.
 22. The system of claim 21 whereinthe display adapter routes the received event to the first and seconddisplay areas based on an attribute associated with the received event.23. The system of claim 17 for use in a Unix environment wherein thetotal displayable area is mapped to a root window and controlled by amaster display server, and the display adapter generates the seconddisplay area controlled by its own display server.